How To Mount Any Size TV Bracket Into Drywall With Just A Screwdriver!

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 138

  • @Hit3ch23
    @Hit3ch23 Год назад +46

    I respect your channel 50 times more for not editing this video. It shows real life problems with real life solutions. Thank you

  • @Inbal_Feuchtwanger
    @Inbal_Feuchtwanger Год назад +150

    No matter how many people say it's fine, I dont think I could ever feel comfortable mounting something big like a large TV onto just drywall. I need there to be at least 1 stud to feel confident about it holding up.

    • @brianhall9019
      @brianhall9019 Год назад +13

      I feel you, but I’ve used those specific ones on so many different heavy items. They work great. I’ve hung some heavy wall cabinets, tvs and mini split wall units. They are really worth it.

    • @jamesfynnhere6983
      @jamesfynnhere6983 Год назад +23

      100%. It’s an adjustable bracket, there is literally no upside to not putting it in a stud. If you can’t afford a drill you can’t afford a mounted tv.

    • @richardhalliday6469
      @richardhalliday6469 Год назад +3

      At the beginning of the video I noticed near the top of the wall you had magnetic drywall screw detector stuck to what I presume is the stud, I would have gone with that solution and screwed into timber. Plasterboard ( in the UK ) never lends it self to heavy load support with toggles ( my opinion only )

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад +12

      Agree one stud would be nice! Not always possible above certain types of fireplace framing.

    • @dwightshelby
      @dwightshelby Год назад

      Thanks for the video, and I will be getting the 10 pack.
      It's a different game changer.

  • @sauros1
    @sauros1 Год назад +34

    I managed a team that did upwards of 30+ TV installations per day in office and medical spaces, and I never allowed a swivel arm mount to be installed in drywall alone. The toggle bolt may hold 50+ lbs, but that doesn't mean the drywall will. We fixed a lot of other people's failed installations. At full extension, the weight of a heavy TV or person leaning on a swivel arm mount is focused on an area about 2in squared and will deflect drywall, and if it has any structural weak points, it will crack it. If you're near a seam, it will crack it. If you MUST use toggles, get a swivel mount that has a wide back plate with 4 fasteners and thus a greater area of contact, or better yet, get a tilt mount that holds the center of gravity closer to the wall. Remember, don't design your solution around the minimum amount of support needed, it needs to be able to handle double a "once-every-5-years load" to be truly safe, or some similar engineering philosophy.

  • @yourmasterrenovator86
    @yourmasterrenovator86 Год назад +11

    Having shown how much torque it can bear is a perfect demonstration for us to know how far we can go to be safe. Thanks for the demonstration 🙏
    Not every attempt has to go right, we learn by our failures.
    Thank you again 🙏

  • @MarkDownMark
    @MarkDownMark Год назад +13

    My FIL swore by these and much to my opposition, he used them for his 75” TV as he said using studs would weaken their integrity. They held up fine for the longest time…until a hurricane came through and caused damage to his roof which caused a leak, right above the TV. The drywall got wet and down came the TV, causing far more damage than if he would’ve found a stud or two. These are great, if you don’t plan on wetting your drywall. 😂

  • @freezerlunik
    @freezerlunik Год назад +21

    these toggle anchors are about as much as one could get from attaching to a sheet of drywall. The reality is that the holding weight spec was exceeded by the extra torque due to the bracket acting as a lever. If it were a heavy painting just pulling straight down, yeah one anchor might hold 200+ pounds/100kg. It is just too much to ask from the sheet of drywall though.

  • @ThingsAnStuff
    @ThingsAnStuff 4 месяца назад +8

    The load rating of the anchors is only for force applied pretty much at the wall surface. Because you were using an extendable bracket and hanging off the arm, that extra leverage could have effectively doubled or tripled the your weight, so the anchors actually held up pretty well. Extendable tv brackets are probably one of the only situations where you’d have something so heavy mounted so far out from a wall, but for any wanting an extendable tv mount, make sure your anchors are rated at several times the tv weight, an don’t hang off of them 😂

  • @deadnthehead4557
    @deadnthehead4557 Год назад +7

    Instructions are straightforward and easy to follow. I can't help but imagine there is some folks out here just stabbing screw drivers into the wall and hoping things line up. I just knew without a doubt there was going to be a segue into a drywall repair video at the end! 🤣 And it was the Vancouver Carpenter guy!

  • @MarkAlbert
    @MarkAlbert Год назад +2

    Yes, I have been using these snap/toggle bolts for several years now to hang heavy objects. So far, no known failures and I keep a steady supply on hand.

  • @michaelkushner7181
    @michaelkushner7181 2 месяца назад +1

    I used the same mounting hardware and it worked very well for me. One of the best mounting anchors.

  • @ThePittEngineer
    @ThePittEngineer Год назад +8

    I love those snap toggles! Been using them for years 0 issues!

  • @erniewarinner7692
    @erniewarinner7692 Год назад +1

    I have been using those snap toggle bolts for many years. Best mounting solution I have found.

  • @gnic76
    @gnic76 Год назад +6

    Appreciate your dedication by messing your wall up to give your audience the skills needed.
    I used those a few years ago, worked great, just remember that you need a minimum distance behind the wall, sometimes insulation will interfere with the toggle.

  • @8minecrafter8
    @8minecrafter8 Год назад +8

    The 265 lbs rating may not apply if you have a big lever arm hanging the load 1.5 feet out from the wall, lol

  • @gordonshute8816
    @gordonshute8816 Год назад +12

    Breaking the wall at the end was great! Shows that the drywall broke before the fastener. Really good object lesson

  • @Vuweatherman25
    @Vuweatherman25 Год назад +2

    I love these snap toggle bolt anchors. They have served me very well. Id be weary of using them for a tv simply because of how expensive it is but ive had plenty of projects holding for years now where a stud just wasnt available. Guess it could happen for a tv too!

  • @heystarfish100
    @heystarfish100 Год назад +6

    I finally see you being funny! 🤣🤣🤣 Those toggles are awesome and I have been using and recommending them for this application for many years. Be safe out there!

  • @randutch3860
    @randutch3860 Год назад +5

    "UGGGHHH...Why do I do this to myself??......I'm never going to finish this house..." I've murmured this exact phrase several times while working on my house....

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад

      Lol, I did this as well on the baseboard removal video im working on. Wanted to show what happens when you don't cut the caulking properly, and boom a huge piece of drywall paper ripped right off.

  • @shanewalker3427
    @shanewalker3427 Год назад +1

    Now that you've damaged the drywall you might as well throw some blocking back there while you fix it. I wouldn't trust them for a TV or cabinets but I'm going to give those toggles a try sometime. Looks much easier than the old school ones.

  • @therealmfwic9503
    @therealmfwic9503 Год назад +2

    I install and service dental equipment for a living. The largest manufacturer of dental equipment sends these along with their cabinets to mount them to the wall. They are pretty much my go to when studs aren’t an option. Although I always try to get a couple screws into a stud just to be safe.

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад +1

      I once supervised the Tenent improvement on a dental office. I couldn't believe how detailed and awesome their drawings and specs were.

    • @therealmfwic9503
      @therealmfwic9503 Год назад

      @@TheFunnyCarpenter yea there’s a lot that goes into it. You have air, water, suction and power that have to go to multiple locations in each operators. Plus you have the oxygen and nitrous lines. The air, oxygen and nitrous are all considered medical gases so the lines have to be brazed. It’s crazy. It takes lots of trips to get all the stuff along with the blocking in the walls and ceiling for the light and X-rays correct

  • @JohnFontenot1
    @JohnFontenot1 10 месяцев назад

    I just finished installing a heated towel bar using the snap toggles. Thank you for a great recommendation.

  • @cowoncrack8337
    @cowoncrack8337 Год назад +5

    smiled like a child when you linked to Vancouver carpenter

  • @tedpuckett2779
    @tedpuckett2779 Год назад +1

    Sneaky way to get folk to watch your drywall repair vid. 😂
    Thanks for the share.

  • @sociopathmercenary
    @sociopathmercenary Год назад +3

    With the adjustable arm brackets, I've never run into a situation where mounting it to a stud would put the bracket in a location where it wasn't adjustable to where you wanted the TV.
    Do what you want but I would attach it to a stud.

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад +1

      If you have the tools, studs for sure. But sometimes like over a fireplace in some situations there may not be and studs to hit. Or a more likely scenario a basement with 2' centres and you can only hit 1 stud. These anchors would be awesome.

    • @sociopathmercenary
      @sociopathmercenary Год назад +1

      @@TheFunnyCarpenter I understand your point and I'm sure these will hold most TVs.
      My thinking is that, if you don't have the ability to drive a screw into a stud, perhaps you should just buy a TV console. All the TV mounts I use are made to attach to a single stud. If I absolutely needed to attach the TV mount in an area where there were no studs, my second option would be to use a board to span between the studs and attach the mount to that.
      Just my thought process.

    • @Anytus2007
      @Anytus2007 Год назад

      ​@@sociopathmercenary I had it happen once where I needed to get a TV to sit flush and centered in a niche but the framing alignment made it impossible (couldn't go sideways AND back enough simultaneously). This was also a large TV, over 70", so it had a 2 stud bracket.
      I ended up using a similar solution to what you said. Plywood gusset fastened to 4 studs and toggle bolt the bracket to that.

  • @peterevans8194
    @peterevans8194 Год назад +1

    If you want to mount something heavy on plasterboard only, GeeFix are the strongest fixing I know of...The main down side is you need a slightly deeper cavity behind to deploy them.
    After those, I would then say Bullfix Extra Heavy Duty, (not the cheaper Universal version). Thirdly, would be the toggle bolts shown in the video.
    In truth, I would be reluctant to mount any large TV on an arm into plasterboard only, simply because of the extra leverage those arms excerpt onto the plasterboard itself...

  • @debra2107
    @debra2107 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the REAL WORLD scenario! I'm going to give these toggle bolts a try (but not for my TV...)! 😁

  • @junior13231978
    @junior13231978 5 месяцев назад +1

    You just gave me a reason to find the studs🤣

  • @jimnora1705
    @jimnora1705 Год назад +1

    Used the "easy anchor" toggles on my tv bracket. They work great as well.

  • @johnbeswick6747
    @johnbeswick6747 Год назад +1

    Great information. Every time I tune in the info is very useful.

  • @SRM2025
    @SRM2025 Год назад

    Thank you. Just purchased a TV and mount and you popped up in my algorithm. I am going to mount mine in the gyprock (plaster) as new large TV’s these days are so light. The Togglers are sold out in the hardware stores here in Australia & postage is exy from Amazon US so I’m doing it the old fashioned way yet yeah, people up in arms here must have older TV’s that are heavier I reckon. Take care, Mate. 👍

  • @SydneyReader
    @SydneyReader Год назад +1

    hands down my favorite joke from you ever!!!! combining two of my favorite childhood shows - mr. bean and macgyver. i'm dead.

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад

      I have really enjoyed a hundred smiles thinking about that tv bracket! Spray foam and clear tape is too much!

  • @bereasonable8018
    @bereasonable8018 Год назад +4

    I can attest that I made a mess hanging a tv about 9 years ago. Never heard of snap toggle bolts back then. But for what it's worth, the tv is still mounted. I'm just afraid to move it. lol

  • @michaelcabrera7420
    @michaelcabrera7420 2 месяца назад

    You’re awesome dude thanks for this video, your humor and authenticity

  • @LarryB-inFL
    @LarryB-inFL Год назад +1

    I was certain you were going to break the drywall...yet thought maybe "he knows something I don't"! The obvious disconnect is "265 lbs" meaning direct downward shear. That lever arm was never going to stand up to your weight!
    Yes, I LOVE those snap toggles...just tried them recently!

    • @bcmanucd
      @bcmanucd Год назад +2

      Yeah, it looks like the point he was hanging from was roughly twice the distance between the two screws. So there was approximately twice his weight in outward force on that upper anchor. Even if the 265 lb rating is accurate, that's not how it was loaded for his test. If he'd hung from a point right against the wall, it might have held. But on the other hand, a 80 lb TV on the far end of the mount when it's fully extended might put 4-5 times its weight in outward force on the anchor.

  • @bobmartin6055
    @bobmartin6055 Год назад +1

    Outstanding! Perfect advertisement for your other very helpful video!!

  • @armax00
    @armax00 Год назад +2

    Beautiful, I don't think I have seen these here in Europe. I have been using instead plastic plugs similar to the metal ones you mentioned and those are said to hold 15 kg per screw but I never know hiw much the dry wall holds. One thing I was told was to use a wooden base hooked on the studs behind the drywall but I have never tried.

    • @IScreamer
      @IScreamer Год назад

      Yeah, that’s a good solution. In my previous condo, where the studs are metal, I attached a sheet of plywood to the drywall with 6 toggle bolts, painted the plywood the same colour as the wall, then screwed the TV bracket to the plywood with appropriately sized screws. Everything held rock solid.

  • @jerseyneil1
    @jerseyneil1 9 дней назад

    In my opinion, find the stud in the wall. Then, you can hang heavy items without worrying. A stud finder costs about $25 at the hardware store, worth the investment.

  • @Lisa-on3ee
    @Lisa-on3ee Год назад +1

    How the actual?? Glad we still have genius minds in the world:)

  • @WowRixter
    @WowRixter Год назад +1

    Very interesting product. I'll have to check it out

  • @Superman_88.97
    @Superman_88.97 8 месяцев назад +4

    I think the jumping is what did you in on this one

  • @nixquev
    @nixquev Год назад +2

    I love these but very often the screw is way too big for the hole on the thing I'm trying to attach. I wanted to use them on small shelves and such that would hold books but it's almost always too big of a screw.

  • @zorot3876
    @zorot3876 Год назад +1

    People do this with radiators too and its a recipe for disaster. It will stay up long enough for the contractor to clear off and not answer their phone.

  • @danielleLaw007
    @danielleLaw007 2 месяца назад +1

    No the house isn't haunted, things are just falling off the drywall on their own 😂

  • @phillyfathead
    @phillyfathead Год назад +1

    Excellent demonstration, thank you!

  • @MyMy-tv7fd
    @MyMy-tv7fd Год назад +2

    I really do like to see the occasional fail - I never trust just toggle bolts or fancy pants variants - just affix a glued and screwed panel, then toggle bolt into that I say

  • @imgadgetmanjim
    @imgadgetmanjim Год назад +1

    Someone offered me a big tv yhat was older but led. The thing weighed over 95 pounds. I bought a 65 inch that weighed about 30. Was afraid to hang the heavy one. Nice system. I think if you gently pulled yourself up it would hold you.

  • @df-ln8sn
    @df-ln8sn 10 месяцев назад +1

    Studs all the way of cousre your not going to use a screwdriver for a stud, but those toggles would be the best choice for a tv

  • @Hipster55
    @Hipster55 Год назад +1

    Interesting... what's the life expectancy of these drywall clips in a coastal environment where corrosion from salt air/humidity is high?

  • @Tjommel
    @Tjommel Год назад

    I used the same mount on my EU-concrete wall... even for that i have to use very long and thicc screws... but now... i think even a 100KG human can stand on it^^

  • @itssnooker
    @itssnooker Год назад +1

    If anyone doesn't know how to find studs behind drywall & how to use a driller & drillbit then stay away from mounting anything, call a handy man to do that. TVs are expensive don't take a chance with inserting brackets into 1/4 inch or 1/2 inch drywall

  • @njwebwiz
    @njwebwiz Год назад +1

    So the title really should be "How to NOT Mount Any Size TV Bracket Into Drywall With Just A Screwdriver".

  • @deborahvlockauthor1130
    @deborahvlockauthor1130 Год назад

    Love your videos! How do you mount heavy objects on horsehair/plaster walls? I assume these will not work...

  • @ED-es2qv
    @ED-es2qv Год назад

    Hot tip: try a wood screw first, in case there's a stud behind one of your holes, otherwise the anchor tears the crap out of the Sheetrock when it hits wood.

  • @manickronic
    @manickronic Год назад +3

    Okay, then how do you remove the toggle bolts in future?

    • @conradcoolerfiend
      @conradcoolerfiend Год назад +5

      i would just knock it thru into the wall with a screwdriver. yes there is a hole to patch but that is the case for any drywall anchor

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад +2

      Yes

  • @peachfuzz89
    @peachfuzz89 Год назад +1

    Considering a good TV can be over $1000, it seems silly to me to not mount to a stud. The weak point with the best drywall anchors is the drywall itself. Finding a stud isn't difficult, even without a stud finder, and a cheap drill is less than $50. 🤷‍♂️

  • @conradcoolerfiend
    @conradcoolerfiend Год назад +3

    i would say this is not ideal, but sufficient, if no ones gonna really manhandle the tv. I would not do this with kids!

  • @Pete.Ty1
    @Pete.Ty1 Год назад

    👍👍👍.Thank you

  • @bossmanz28
    @bossmanz28 Год назад

    I still wouldnt trust my 75" on just drywall. Idc if it says 265 lbs and i think my 75 is like 100 or 120. If anything the larger the tv the easier it is to hide the mounting bracket behind it. 2 tvs in my house that are large i extended them with perforated angle to make the legs for mounting long and spanned 3 studs. I needed to do this though because of where the studs were and the factory bracket on jus 2 studs put the tv offset and not where i wanted it or could even have it. Didnt even to drill holes in the tv mount bracket since the holes are long horizontal slots.

  • @vinceferraccioli4661
    @vinceferraccioli4661 Год назад +2

    I could see this coming lol😅😅😅

  • @kenkobra
    @kenkobra Год назад +1

    So you are telling me somebody really put foam and tape to help hold the mount on the wall? If so, they should never pick up another tool or try to fix anything.

  • @Samlol23_drrich
    @Samlol23_drrich Год назад

    Next video; how to change a cracked panel on an LED television.

  • @dsmasynergy
    @dsmasynergy 9 месяцев назад +1

    Rated for 265 pounds, drywall breaks. Dude, ease up on the cheese burgers :)

  • @jmedi5589
    @jmedi5589 10 месяцев назад

    Only thing is, the packaging specifically says not to use to mount tv on drywall.

  • @jasonyeung9310
    @jasonyeung9310 Год назад

    Vancouver Carpenter collab? ;D

  • @trig
    @trig Год назад +1

    Thats 265lbs static not dynamic. On a stand that is intended to allow the tv to be re-positioned on a regular basis I would suggest these are not a suitable fixing for this application.

    • @TheFunnyCarpenter
      @TheFunnyCarpenter  Год назад +1

      If you had a wider bracket with 4 of these. I would mount a 60" TV. Studs are the way to go but sometimes not always possible, like over a fireplace in some situations.

  • @stokes111111
    @stokes111111 4 месяца назад

    bless you

  • @PaulCloves
    @PaulCloves Год назад

    Well now the walls damaged and needs cutting out and repairing u can throw them anchors away and put some ply in the cavity and close the wall back up the way it should b done properly to avoid the nagging dought in ur head that is that tv ever gonna stay on the wall that’s the way we do it

  • @lechiffre5078
    @lechiffre5078 7 месяцев назад

    I’ve used these and think they are great, but no way would I trust them to hang an expensive, large TV. It may hold, but I’d never sleep again.

  • @SteelyTheVan
    @SteelyTheVan 11 месяцев назад

    Too funny!

  • @thestomach
    @thestomach Год назад

    Oh no!!! Such disappointment (I appreciate that you tried!). Now you have to make a drywall repair video...

  • @user-zq6pj5jo8j
    @user-zq6pj5jo8j Год назад

    I hate those as all toggle and anchors like that puncture the rear drywall paper making the drywall weak and rip a large hole just like he did even with a lot less weight. The 265Lbs is complete BS by the manufacture.

  • @tedmcdonald3377
    @tedmcdonald3377 Год назад

    😎⚒️😎⚒️😎

  • @j0.ZEF-Who
    @j0.ZEF-Who Год назад

    Well your obviously well over 350lbs

  • @SamiWolfyDark
    @SamiWolfyDark 10 месяцев назад

    😂😂😂

  • @FredPatzold
    @FredPatzold 7 месяцев назад +1

    So basically everything you just did and said is wrong

  • @fannymackk
    @fannymackk 4 месяца назад

    4:55 very confused, you say they are incredible yet they didn’t hold up after the test lol is this an endorsement or not? 😂

  • @danstheman33
    @danstheman33 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is terrible and dangerous advice! You absolutely should NEVER mount an extendable TV with just Snaptoggles. Snaptoggles are a great product, I buy them in bulk and use them frequently, but drywall alone is not strong enough for that type of mount. For a lightweight, flush mount TV it's fine, but for an extendable / motion mount, you absolutely need to use studs.
    And you are totally misunderstanding the load ratings of Snaptoggles. Those are the 'ultimate load' aka the FAILURE load. That is the load at which it rips out of the wall. If you read the manufacturer's instructions /specs you would know this. The actual maximum safe working load is one fourth of the ultimate load. In 1/2" drywall in good condition, the max working load is 60 lbs tension, or 62 lbs shear.
    Please stop giving out dangerous and incorrect advice. You should delete or post a correction on this video (edit: see my update below). And start reading the damn instructions for products before you produce a video instruction people to use it incorrectly, and giving wildly incorrect information about how much weight it can safely support.
    PS- Where on earth did you find such a tiny TV mount, is that thing made for a dollhouse or something?
    PPS- I didn't watch the whole video before, but the more I watch, the worse it is- You didn't even use a level and a freakin pencil? How are you a carpenter?
    PPPS- The more I watch, the worse it gets. You installed the Snaptoggle sideways. For this and most applications, the toggle should be installed vertically, that provides the most strength for this type of load. Which again is something you would know if you read the instructions, or were familiar with any type of toggle bolt..
    PPPPS - I finally watched to the end.. 😂Well I'm glad at least people learned something, and I suppose kudos for leaving that embarrassing part in. I still think you should post a correction explaining why that didn't work, and explaining the actual load ratings. And the fact that cantilever loads greatly increase the load on walls, exponentially in some cases.

  • @paulsmith9341
    @paulsmith9341 Год назад +2

    Scratch that anchor off the list!

    • @conradcoolerfiend
      @conradcoolerfiend Год назад +2

      nah, its the best drywall anchor. if this anchor doesnt work for a given application, none do.

    • @jamesfynnhere6983
      @jamesfynnhere6983 Год назад

      Why use an anchor at all here? The mount is adjustable so not even position aesthetics justify not using a stud.

    • @conradcoolerfiend
      @conradcoolerfiend Год назад +3

      @@jamesfynnhere6983 the video is pointed at people without tools. Maybe a college kid or something for a temporary install. If you have a drill and wrench etc you definitely should use a stud.

  • @thomasflynn8712
    @thomasflynn8712 Год назад

    That was funny