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I've been in a lot of houses and apartments that have been renovated or are new construction, and I'm never surprised by what I see. Take this expensive bathroom vanity as an example:
Here the bath vanity is falling off the wall, not a good thing. Especially for a brand new renovation.
Crawling underneath the vanity and searching around, I found that the whole vanity, with this heavy counter top, had been installed with 4 drywall screws. And two of screws did not hit a stud.
On the right side of the vanity the drywall screws had sheared. wow.
Before starting to fix this, I explained to the homeowner that it was possible the vanity top would crack when we raised it back into place. Always warn people.
I got the car jack from our car and with some scrap lumber, raised the vanity a bit higher than its original location. I did this because I knew the vanity would probably drop just a bit when screwing it back in to the wall.
I then got my hammer drill out - the right wall is the common wall between 2 brownstones, hence its a double brick wall- and drilled a ⅜" hole thru the tile deep into the brick.
I drove in a sleeved anchor, and tightened the vanity to the wall. If you have to hammer in a sleeved anchor, put the nut on the anchor before hitting it with hammer to save the threads. These anchors hold a lot of weight and are easy to put in, the hardest part is drilling the hole. I use them to hang TVs on brick and cement walls.
What surprises have you found when doing repairs? Tell us below
Stuccolow
Demo starts Saturday! I'll report back what they find.
Kenan
The tile guy should be incarcerated. What mess.
Eric Gunnar Rochow
its wild some of the stuff we see while working. thx, eri c