How to fit a screw into a drilled big hole on wall?
I am fitting a window blind on a wall.
I have drilled a hole on wall bigger than the screw size.
The drilled hole on the wall has a diameter of 6mm
The screw I try to fit in has a diameter of 3mm
Here is the image of the drilled hole o the wall:
Here is the image of the screw with the window blind holder:
How do I fit the screw tightly and safely on the large drilled hole on wall?
screws drill blinds
New contributor
add a comment |
I am fitting a window blind on a wall.
I have drilled a hole on wall bigger than the screw size.
The drilled hole on the wall has a diameter of 6mm
The screw I try to fit in has a diameter of 3mm
Here is the image of the drilled hole o the wall:
Here is the image of the screw with the window blind holder:
How do I fit the screw tightly and safely on the large drilled hole on wall?
screws drill blinds
New contributor
Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago
add a comment |
I am fitting a window blind on a wall.
I have drilled a hole on wall bigger than the screw size.
The drilled hole on the wall has a diameter of 6mm
The screw I try to fit in has a diameter of 3mm
Here is the image of the drilled hole o the wall:
Here is the image of the screw with the window blind holder:
How do I fit the screw tightly and safely on the large drilled hole on wall?
screws drill blinds
New contributor
I am fitting a window blind on a wall.
I have drilled a hole on wall bigger than the screw size.
The drilled hole on the wall has a diameter of 6mm
The screw I try to fit in has a diameter of 3mm
Here is the image of the drilled hole o the wall:
Here is the image of the screw with the window blind holder:
How do I fit the screw tightly and safely on the large drilled hole on wall?
screws drill blinds
screws drill blinds
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
hunterexhunterex
61
61
New contributor
New contributor
Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago
add a comment |
Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago
Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The wall looks like plaster or drywall (aka sheetrock). You insert an "anchor" into the hole and thread a screw into the anchor. plastic anchors for plaster or drywall
But if there is solid wood of sufficient dimensions behind the plaster you use a long enough screw to thread into the wood. In your case, if you have good wood behind the plaster, but you have drilled too large a hole for the screw, just use a long enough anchor to fit an inch or more into the wood and thread in the screw. The anchor will expand as the screw goes in and will grip the sides of the hole in the wood.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The wall looks like plaster or drywall (aka sheetrock). You insert an "anchor" into the hole and thread a screw into the anchor. plastic anchors for plaster or drywall
But if there is solid wood of sufficient dimensions behind the plaster you use a long enough screw to thread into the wood. In your case, if you have good wood behind the plaster, but you have drilled too large a hole for the screw, just use a long enough anchor to fit an inch or more into the wood and thread in the screw. The anchor will expand as the screw goes in and will grip the sides of the hole in the wood.
add a comment |
The wall looks like plaster or drywall (aka sheetrock). You insert an "anchor" into the hole and thread a screw into the anchor. plastic anchors for plaster or drywall
But if there is solid wood of sufficient dimensions behind the plaster you use a long enough screw to thread into the wood. In your case, if you have good wood behind the plaster, but you have drilled too large a hole for the screw, just use a long enough anchor to fit an inch or more into the wood and thread in the screw. The anchor will expand as the screw goes in and will grip the sides of the hole in the wood.
add a comment |
The wall looks like plaster or drywall (aka sheetrock). You insert an "anchor" into the hole and thread a screw into the anchor. plastic anchors for plaster or drywall
But if there is solid wood of sufficient dimensions behind the plaster you use a long enough screw to thread into the wood. In your case, if you have good wood behind the plaster, but you have drilled too large a hole for the screw, just use a long enough anchor to fit an inch or more into the wood and thread in the screw. The anchor will expand as the screw goes in and will grip the sides of the hole in the wood.
The wall looks like plaster or drywall (aka sheetrock). You insert an "anchor" into the hole and thread a screw into the anchor. plastic anchors for plaster or drywall
But if there is solid wood of sufficient dimensions behind the plaster you use a long enough screw to thread into the wood. In your case, if you have good wood behind the plaster, but you have drilled too large a hole for the screw, just use a long enough anchor to fit an inch or more into the wood and thread in the screw. The anchor will expand as the screw goes in and will grip the sides of the hole in the wood.
answered 52 mins ago
Jim StewartJim Stewart
10.9k11230
10.9k11230
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hunterex is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Does the metal bracket offer more hole locations than you actually need? If so, perhaps you could just drill a new hole...
– unutbu
43 mins ago
@unutbu, hole location at the top are not possible as the wall structure is weak. So the better option is to place the screw at the side
– hunterex
36 mins ago