this post was submitted on 19 Sep 2023
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Do-It-Yourself, Repairs and Fixes
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Share tips and tricks to keep people from throwing out that broken item. Repair before replace!
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If you use the same bolts and you're careful not to cross thread the studs, then it should have similar holding strength. I don't know how much it would be diminished if you did cross thread, though. The bolts for these mount tend to be rather large relative to the width of the studs, but my guess is that it wouldn't matter much.
What I do when I mount TV's, or anything heavy, is I first mount a plywood interface using a French cleat, and then bolt the TV mount to the plywood instead of the wall, so that I can position it exactly where I want it. I don't know if that will help here, but it might.
A French cleat has enough strength? The tv is like 65lbs and I’ll be putting it on a mount with a 40” reach so it will be hanging kinda far off the wall while in use. Otherwise it will be folded up to the wall.
You can make a French cleat as strong as you want. If you're moving the TV around a lot and having it that far away from the wall, I would be worried about the French cleat camming out if you don't make the plywood panel tall enough. You could mitigate this by clamping the cleat together with screws or actual clamps, but if I was going to be moving the TV around, I'd do a more rigid mounting system. I'd still use a plywood interface, and I'd still space it off the wall a bit to allow for cable routing, bolts for the TV mount, etc., but I would just bolt the whole thing to the wall.