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I'd like to put shelves in my laundry and family room, attaching them to dry walls. They will need to bear loads of up to 10-12 kgs. I have a couple of questions:
1. Can I use floating shelves for this? If so, could I use Ikea shelves on dry walls and do I need to attach them to the studs or can I attach them to the dry wall using an anchor or dry wall screw?
2. If you suggest that a bracket would be better, what dry wall anchors or screws would be best?
3. Are there any other things I need to take into consideration?
Thanks for your time and help.
Hi @AmandaV,
It's always best to install shelving directly into the timber stud work. If you do, you'll be able to use the shelving to its maximum load rating. When connecting shelving to plasterboard, it should only be used for lightweight materials, as the fixings now govern the maximum capacity. For instance, if you were to use Ramset Nylon WallMate Plasterboard Anchors, which are suitable for up to 10kg, they would hold your required weight, but if you were to press down on that shelf accidentally, the fixings would likely fail and cause the shelf to fall down.
I'd recommend using floating shelves for ornaments and lightweight items. For functional shelving, it's best to go with brackets fixed into studs. Here's a helpful step-by-step guide: How to use a stud finder.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Mitchell
Hi @AmandaV,
In addition to Mitch's helpful advice, you might also find this guide helpful for situations like this in future: How to hang just about anything.
Let us know how you go.
Thanks,
Jason
Thanks Mitchell- brackets it is then!
Thanks Jason - and thanks for the guide suggestion.
Hi @MitchellMc I'm trying to put this shelving on the wall and ran into some issues, I found it very hard to screw the nails into the anchors. One of them resulted in a damaged plasterboard. Should I use a good filler (please recommend a good filler) and try with another anchor or just try a larger anchor? Any advice is appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Hi @judessc,
I trust @JacobZ will respond to your question in the discussion you've created, but my thoughts are to use a spring toggle in the larger hole.
Mitchell
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