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TV onto plasterboard wall


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I'm getting round to mounting my TV.

 

It's 50 inch, weighs just under 20 kg and will need to be cantilevered out into the room - generally around 30 - 45 degrees but occasionally up to almost 90 degrees

 

The wall is plasterboard onto battened block.

 

What should I use?

 

(I'm not doing it myself - my son is doing it and I'm 'helping')

 

 

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So you need a decent mount like this. 

 

https://cpc.farnell.com/pro-signal/ps-fmsat446d/full-motion-tv-mount-with-tilt/dp/ST04042

 

Then it needs bolting to the wall, but not crushing the plasterboard. 

 

quickest way is to mark the bolt holes on to the wall, then carefully drill some 25mm holes through the plasterboard. Drill the centres for some decent M10 Stud Rawlbolts - don’t bother with anything else - and then use a stack of washers to bring the surface flush with the board. Fit the bracket and tighten the nuts up. 

 

This pushes the force onto the wall though the studs and washers, not the plasterboard. 

 

 

 

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I do quite a lot of mounting peoples tv's on walls.

 

In this situation I would cut a strip of plasterboard out, use that gap created to slot some more battens in to fill the gap where the mount is to go. Screw the battens to the block  (and probably sticks like sh*t them as well)  Put the plasterboard back and fill the joints, screw the bracket on.

 

It's the swivel function that causes your problem as it forces a bracket that has a small footprint on the wall.  If you just want it flat perhaps with the ability to tilt, but not swivel, then it is a LOT easier with a wide bracket that is wide enough to span between studs and get at least one, preverably 2, fixings into the studs.

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3 hours ago, ProDave said:

I do quite a lot of mounting peoples tv's on walls.

 

In this situation I would cut a strip of plasterboard out, use that gap created to slot some more battens in to fill the gap where the mount is to go. Screw the battens to the block  (and probably sticks like sh*t them as well)  Put the plasterboard back and fill the joints, screw the bracket on.

 

It's the swivel function that causes your problem as it forces a bracket that has a small footprint on the wall.  If you just want it flat perhaps with the ability to tilt, but not swivel, then it is a LOT easier with a wide bracket that is wide enough to span between studs and get at least one, preverably 2, fixings into the studs.

 

Thanks Dave - it definitely needs to be able to swivel as it is on a flat wall, in the middle of the room between the kitchen and living area.  I can get a good view when it is at about 30 degrees from the wall but on the rare occasion there are others here who also want to watch it needs to swivel to almost 90 degrees.  I wouldn't really have any concerns if it was to stay flat to the wall but I am very aware the swivelling it into the room will add much greater pressure

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15 hours ago, Hecateh said:

I've already got the mount - it is very similar to that one.

 

What length M10s?

 

 

 

120mm would do - don’t drill all the way through the blocks and then just set them in the blocks with the washer and no spacers. Undo the nut, fit the spacer washers and then tighten up. 

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1 minute ago, PeterW said:

wonder if they would take the weight so far off the wall..??

Yep, that's my worry.  I have mounted my own towel radiators, shelves, mirrors etc but the weight of a tv, albeit relatively light compared to they used to weigh, at almost full extension scares me a bit.  As it does my son as I have been waiting for him to 'find time' to do it since Christmas. 

It is currently stood on a table though and is really in the way.  The speakers have had to be placed behind it and the wires are a big tangle.  

 

I think maybe @ProDave 's way might be the safest.  

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3 minutes ago, PeterW said:

Sorry but I wouldn’t screw anything into 25mm batten and hope it stays there ..!! Bolted to the blockwork is a must, 20kg on a 750mm lever is a lot of force for a screw to take. 

Was thinking of screwing straight through it and into the blockwork, using it like the washers to stop the plaster board popping.

I've ordered these

https://smile.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07B3X2PY4/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

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2 minutes ago, Hecateh said:

Was thinking of screwing straight through it and into the blockwork, using it like the washers to stop the plaster board popping.

I've ordered these

https://smile.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07B3X2PY4/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

 

Seen these a few times and wondered how good they were. Trick with drilling block is always make the hole the correct size, and use a decent drill bit. 

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Matt has the full kit - he's an aspiring property developer whose partner won't let him give up the day job because he is lazy unmotivated when there are no deadlines.

 

They've done one evenings and weekends and made a good profit on it.  

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1 hour ago, Hecateh said:

I would cut a strip of plasterboard out, use that gap created to slot some more battens in to fill the gap where the mount is to go. Screw the battens to the block

 

We have just mounted a 42" TV on a swivel arm much the same way, but ours uses a vertically orientated mount and comes highly reviewed.  As it happened one of the vertical battens (stud in our case) was in a suitable position so we could screw directly into that.  It might be worth using a stud finder to locate your studs because if one is suitably positioned, then putting any mounting bolts through this, so the stud acts as the stand-off will save a lot of work.

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I might:

 

- Mark where the bracket is going.

- With a 25mmm Starrett drill the pb and mark the block behind with the pilot of the Starrett.

- Drill the wall for resin studs.

- Puff out the holes.

- Inject resin, push in studs.

- Put a nut on each stud then a penny washer level with the face of the pb.

- Bolt bracket on

 

Only issue I can see is whether the M10 nuts & protruding studs holding the bracket on would affect the bit of the bracket attached to the tv. Also would want to get the studs all the same length.

 

 

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On ‎23‎/‎03‎/‎2019 at 13:12, PeterW said:

 

Seen these a few times and wondered how good they were. Trick with drilling block is always make the hole the correct size, and use a decent drill bit. 

 

I've used the small Rigifix fixing which better/more complicated* design in this style for dot and dab on brick. They are very solid and I will use in future for shelves heavy objects/Floating shelves.

 

The large version (M8) is only 100mm long which you would probably consider borderline for pb + batten.

 

*delete as applicable

Edited by daiking
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In the end we used the bolts supplied.  They were about 150mm and looked sturdier than the ones I ordered with the metal collars.   Matt ensured he had found a batten as I don't yet have any skirting so it could be located at the bottom

 

Now I just have to decide what goes underneath to control and manage all the wires and 'gubbins'.  I have a freesat box which needs to sit at least 100mm from the wall because of the power and coaxial cables.  I've ordered some angled fittings for the coaxial cables but not sure what to do about the power cable.  Though that is not quite as rigid, it can't be good for it to be under any pressure.

 

I assume with the coaxial I can cut them and refit the connectors - are there any issues with this?  I need less than a meter and they are about 3 m long.  I know to leave a bit of spare but the spare is coiled up at the moment and as there are 2 of them it looks pretty messy.

 

 

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Plugs:

 

Fitting F plugs:

 

http://www.satcure.co.uk/tech/fplugs.htm

 

Coax plugs:

 

http://www.satcure.co.uk/tech/tvplugs.htm

 

D trunking sometimes a neat solution:

 

https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Main_Index/Trunking_Pvc_Index/Dline_Plasma_Trunking/index.html

 

Yes you can shorten the "aerial" leads.

Edited by Onoff
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42 minutes ago, Hecateh said:

I have a freesat box which needs to sit at least 100mm from the wall because of the power and coaxial cables.

 

Have you though of upgrading to a Humax DVR?  We drive our TV through the Humax.   I can't remember the last time that I watched live TV.  I don't recall doing it once in the new house.  We record and time shift (absolutely essential IMO for the channels with ads) or watch iPlayer / Netflix through the Humax.  We also have a Chromecast, but about the only time that I use it is for occasionally casting YouTube, since the Google integration is smoother.

Edited by TerryE
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11iPENJurnfiBTeHRunF_wWMZRrVYEprQ3aG8DPEqvppw4i4y61ITn0xkkIZ8JbrH4w4ZnmOXe-CVrfvBG76H4t1kALXbEJz2RX0KNpThagnYONrkpvidJL9QgSmkxRB2CHcu-dV4ckH5M8FifAeWrWJSekv4a2EjxigvFc0UGbDUPRv8QFuRVsvRMj-8GNSBtvUhWmX65Muau7eYv7CfYyDXcP88fApLmA5nP9QB7W7YYMG9aT7bB3SBOrmtfZc9mXE1w5b_UPmXUM8dKiQ8cgxAOlA8v2W6YCXuNoxShP6AyfU0h5HQatqNsCx9wSK2d9YFQF4xa2q42u0gmT9Vgf5SFSDuOtpwfyX9WlcoWAEk3Yw3_i3M2RJIY0sap8gqb5ydgABQl9fMrt802wl_rZcpFIhQjYyzzfVbZ7PePp0SbhvLDqcn8ozHPX3_srTMsOYJTRlLsK4GF9S-SwEEGu8vDsJdErTUSeoqwFed179c91uxdof5m30bTGNvZWD-FZ5HHgydCxjntDcAtmOvN234hERYLzsOY2DO2DPDrFp1GyJme-Cqh87Pw2EnV_sQmQmb8Lo_RRFZaS0gLAq-I_dFS5zJTtGkO_ruddQ32eWMpLlisHnFN5fRmHupxEQ152BpHO7FlR4ElozdTd66WMyMrT_vl0=w352-h625-no

 

This is how it is currently.  There are 2 sockets and I need 4 so I have a switched extension which is behind the shelves.

 

I can easily mount the 2 small speakers - the base twists to provide a place I can fit to a screw in the wall.

 

Especially as the sockets are already high I want to get rid of those old white shelves and keep everything off the floor so I need to find some neat storage for the freesat box (which is a humax dvr  @TerryE,) and the woofer.  

 

Neither of these have any direct mounting capability.

 

The back of the freesat box is like this

 

 

MIvjYXfDIH3aT9-KE--rmvFTBgT38ZZxQk_iqXYLnbmyrdaoAnVj68kgkc8o-PU8fI2Gq_6rXN_IBYr6E8Sn-meEHyS1e8TXnRtbKRGBtK9DJzoGqc_n98HBVVAF5joq_e0RRfEVFfK-7rXlCwz3YdFkTyje3r4zaETUne06Q6N6Az4Npbq_UMIrzfpxWkyX1UG1h9_RDJWLgdJ3E54aXhpIkedIhsI1V-50xduv1020VTrIwqpvKVV6-uNlQgE7z13zi54TemvRiYm06E591RUO0s72GyjYfNsVAUVqT33WezJi4ML22fIsiZyHImDriP75LJMyJdB1YwC3kO7j8q1Urb8dNiOvsQurOpt9zrMpqwEJw6TC8_L1mShtzeDixYCt9amxo83srI1OjzKKuhgUTLVCDmHmZ6UmrCCegC_AJwMVwqGCq09PYNGIXZkiTncaumHfzE1fVwuw9fEp7godPlfW-WQlx8lyc91SDatf_b0yB1-jaWXOi3PLlsvo5kVkYl4i1vclaRjEU64IroKiA1Y-RzV3y-93dB4aFrl9vXeZ9FKv1kvXgEGUIk5TaDTUQu7bfrYjqSQx-bdHfR5D6DuRlbcKF2uVtb0hr01Vd-ib55Tdl7ZIOVrKUVNZiQJwrn395U1sR95j_gIFlakHsuIhI-o=w1112-h625-no

 

I have ordered right angled adapters to reduce how far the coaxial cables stick out at the back.  The power is not too bad but the cable that TV also protrudes quite a bit.  Are there any right angle adapters for this? 

 

With the freesat I don't need the aerial connection (connection and cable there but no aerial fitted anyway) 

 

 

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On 23/03/2019 at 13:35, TerryE said:

 

We have just mounted a 42" TV on a swivel arm much the same way, but ours uses a vertically orientated mount and comes highly reviewed.  As it happened one of the vertical battens (stud in our case) was in a suitable position so we could screw directly into that.  It might be worth using a stud finder to locate your studs because if one is suitably positioned, then putting any mounting bolts through this, so the stud acts as the stand-off will save a lot of work.

Exactly the same, excellent reviews and a variety of fixings both for the wall and for the tv

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