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• #43477
I'm going to put 50p on cavity with the inner being block work, concrete or thermolight, dabed with plasterboard covered in old blue plaster (other variations available) - anyway it'll give you a good 3-4" to play with the rawl plug - to be going into the blocks
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• #43478
Many thanks for the replies.
The bracket came with these hefty screws and plugs. The plugs say they must be fully inserted into the concrete/brick behind the plaster, so just wanted to make to check I wouldn’t have an issues.
It won’t be a massive screen, so won’t be putting max load on any of this anyway.
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• #43479
The old fashion giving the wall a tap in many places (two or three times with a little think in-between before running into anything) tells a lot
Edited in - or just drill a hole, see and feel what's there -
• #43480
Definitely sounds solid. Will drill away
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• #43481
I'd advise binning those generic plugs and buying the appropriate sized Fischer duoplugs but it's your tv
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• #43482
As above, I never use the generic plugs that come with them. Generally go with whatever Fischer ones are appropriate.
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• #43483
This, the duo plugs are now my go-to. they work well in masonry as well as in insulated plasterboard with the appropriate amount of weight per fixing adjusted for what you are drilling into.
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• #43484
Hit a snag when fitting my joist. The temptation is to take out the wall and see if it lowers. Or the sensible option of take everything off drill a bigger hole, Chuck some resin in and go again.
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• #43485
How worried should I be that this crack has appeared and it appears to flex a couple of mm when I stand on the stair next to it? Probably slightly wider than a £1 coin at the wide end. Stair 2 and 3 are now really squeaky, none of the rest above then are.
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• #43486
Not very. That’s what I keep telling myself about our stairs.
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• #43487
Hopefully not much as mine is the same.
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• #43488
Would anyone like this - for free?
Collection SW14
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/235350164261
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• #43489
Maybe try a diet in January 🙂
On a more serious note, it's pretty normal. You can try using a flexible filler like Toupret Fill-Flex. I've done that with a very fine scrim on staircases, really time consuming process but it's worked well enough.
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• #43490
My loft stairs are loud as fuck. As are my main stairs, to be honest. I've asked most of the trades who've been in if it's an issue. None have been overly bothered.
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• #43491
Probably cause they’re not going for midnight pees
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• #43492
Thankfully, friend/lodger who lives up there has a toilet on the same floor. As do we on the 1st floor. Very noticeable if our friend comes home late, however.
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• #43493
Finally got a day where I have time to finish off all the little things here. Going to treat the floor and call it a day (after doing paint touch ups and the window shelf).
Need to make floating shelves at some point too.
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• #43494
So do I not understand how staircases work? Are winders not fixed to the wall? Is the skirting board on the winders just floating and not like a stringer? I guess I don't understand how it can flex so much
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• #43495
Looking good. Cladding for the plinth to match the front of the desk or invisible in reality?
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• #43496
Do you really want to take that all up (just the carpet) to start the investigation? Potentially just splits , wedges moved impacted, or (and I'll use the wrong word) the stringer has dropped or the wall 'moved'.
[Some twat had stuffed a load of gunk (plaster or caulk) on the top of the stringer , it's very easy to cut off (make good) and use appropriate product in a better quantity]
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• #43497
Ha. Rumbled. No cladding atm. Torn between getting some more ply or just glue some spare flooring on it.
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• #43498
glue some spare flooring on it
If you have some spare, this seems like the easiest option and will look good (make the rest 'float')
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• #43499
Do I want to? No, will it eat away at me until I do, absolutely. Think it mainly bugs me as it just appeared over night. House is only twenty years old, if it was old and had been there when I moved in I would probably not of even looked at it twice. Carpet needs replacing so will come up at some point anyway.
[Some twat had stuffed a load of gunk (plaster or caulk) on the top of the stringer
This is the entire house, there is crap caulking/ filling everywhere.
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• #43500
Sounds like you have the perfect opportunity. Remember this is a total guess but there could be a series of small faults - i can't tell if it's possible but after looking for splits and how they're moving under pressure having access from underneath would definitely help
I'd have thought it extremely unlikely that it was a solid wall if it's that recent.
The usual tells are: age of property (pre- or post- 20s 30s), brickwork bonding (stretcher bond for cavity, header / bonded for solid), and wall thickness (9" vs 12").
If it's an extension, it may be in the plans submitted to the council.
I'm not sure how either would affect how you mount the TV - for an old wall, crumbly brick might be a problem, I guess.