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Thread: TV wall mount help...

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  1. #1
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    I would go back and demand a refund and/or exchange for the correct mount, because we have a wall-mounted flat panel in our bedroom right now and paid $800 for the TV and another $100 for the wall mount, so I'll be darned if we don't get the right one and that TV falls on me, it's too expensive to risk, IMO!

    And yes, you MUST MUST MUST MUST make sure to find a stud... otherwise you may wake up to a surprise

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  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jessika
    And yes, you MUST MUST MUST MUST make sure to find a stud... otherwise you may wake up to a surprise
    Women, always thinking about studs!

  3. #3
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    i´m not sure construction is same here as it is over there.... but by studs you mean the solid concrete thing that usually goes in corners and every now and then??

    if so... I´m not sure there is one were I plan to mount the TV

    our house is made of concrete blocks.... unforunatelly unfilled ones....

    for the record... we have some frames hanged as well.... one is huge and heavy and was screwed with no problem on the blocks.... should i worry about the TV?

    and I will go back to walmart and see if they have a bigger wall mount, if not, I can always have it on the pedestal....but space-wise I prefer mounted...
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  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by RICHARD
    Women, always thinking about studs!
    Oh Richard!!... LMAO... well of course.....
    Corinna´s Christmas Card Swap ´06
    dedicated to a lovely woman who won many hearts along her life...........
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  5. #5
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    Studs are the framing that the dry wall is nailed onto. It's the "skeleton" of your walls if your drywall is the skin. There should typically be a stud every foot or so. It's not too hard to find one if you have one... you can buy a "stud finder" that you just hold up to the wall and it tells you when it's over one, or you can knock on the wall; when you're knocking on a stud you'll hear a difference versus knocking on an empty spot.

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  6. #6
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    houses here are not made of drywall... it´s either bricks or concrete blocks




    then just covered in plaster then paint... so I guess it´s more "solid" than drywall....

    somethign like this
    block wall
    Corinna´s Christmas Card Swap ´06
    dedicated to a lovely woman who won many hearts along her life...........
    she will be deeply missed.......Thank you for letting us be a part of your life, you will surely remain in ours FOREVER........R.I.P. Dear Corinna

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    dedicated to the kindest,loveliest and always helpful dude that one would be honored and proud to know........R.I.P. Dear Phred



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  7. #7
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    Same construction as here Isabel. We have a 40 inch Samsung and got the wall mount for it. Just make sure it is the right size for your TV. You won't have to worry cause the wall will hold it. Ours did with no problems. The concrete blocks along with the plaster makes it quite strong. All we used were some fishers with long screws. If it says your specific TV needs 200 x 200 then bring back the wall mount you got and get the proper one. Ours didn't need one that big. Ours needed 100 X 200 and like I said ours is a 40 inch Samsung.


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  8. #8
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    If you don't have drywall but only have cement block walls, you can still hang something on it. You'll need to use a masonry drill bit. If the walls are hollow, get molly bolts that are long enough to go all the way through to the hollow part (2-1/2 to 3 inches long). They look like long screws with a butterfly nut on the end. Drill the hole as big as the butterfly nut, insert the screw into whatever you are hanging, put the butterfly nut on then put the nut through the hole all the way. Pull on the screw end of the molly while screwing it in. Once the butterfly end hits the inside of the hole, you can tighten the screw all the way.

    The hole you have to create is huge. I'd opt for a pedestal or table instead.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by mruffruff
    If you don't have drywall but only have cement block walls, you can still hang something on it. You'll need to use a masonry drill bit. If the walls are hollow, get molly bolts that are long enough to go all the way through to the hollow part (2-1/2 to 3 inches long). They look like long screws with a butterfly nut on the end. Drill the hole as big as the butterfly nut, insert the screw into whatever you are hanging, put the butterfly nut on then put the nut through the hole all the way. Pull on the screw end of the molly while screwing it in. Once the butterfly end hits the inside of the hole, you can tighten the screw all the way.

    The hole you have to create is huge. I'd opt for a pedestal or table instead.
    Yeah, what she said!

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  10. #10
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    Also good at DEstruction!

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