Given your attention to detail and excellent video quality, include some chit-chat. I am sure that you will have a lot of commentary that we can all learn from. Good job!
Hi. What's the composition and thickness of the wall? I've installed a wooden slat paneling on a partition wall in my apartment. It's hollow bricks, 20 cm across and this just isn't instilling confidence in me that it can withstand a 65'' LG on a full-motion TV mount. I bought the mount yesterday and intended to use small-diameter hole saw to puncture a series of holes corresponding the rectangle that the mount would be fitted upon. My reasoning was that, if much of the nails' were to be stuck inside the wood rather than the bricks behind the slats, that would translate to a lot of pressure on the wood and it could potentially cause some cracks to develop on the panels below. I don't know how sound that theory is, but that is why I wanted to clear the entire rectangle before doing the nailing, so the mounts's nails could fit wholly inside the bricks. I had never played around with a hole saw so just tried it out on parts of the leftover paneling from when I was finishing up the apartment a year ago. I'm honestly terrified to apply it to the actual wall: the pieces of wood fly all over the place and the drill gets stuck very easily. I knocked out like 15 cm of it just by trying to drill a hole between two of the protruding slats. I'm tempted to just nail the mount directly on the paneling, but the TV mount alone is damn heavy, later there will of course also be the 16kg worth of TV. I just don't want the whole thing to come crumbling down on some night. Any suggestions?
Hi. This does not sound safe at all on a full-motion wall mount unfortunately.. Any chance you could mount it on a regular wall mount without full-motion?
@@oslotvmontering It was with full motion in mind that I repositioned my couch a couple of weeks ago, so I could save some floor space (now the couch is standing parallel to the external wall rather than perpendicular to it, which used to drive me insane, and I like the current setup much better), but now it's not going to be reasonable to keep the TV straight upon the wall at all times. From the get-go I assumed it would be tilted horizontally, some 30° degress forward on the left so it faces the corner of the couch (if you image a rectangle with the tilted TV in the upper left corner, then the mirrored L of the couch is in the lower right corner). The mount itself is solid af, with two arms, and I've checked that I will be able to nail it directly to the panels with 12 cm nails possibly in up to fourteen different spots. There will be a bit over two centimeters of plank wood and then the nail will end halfway through the hollow brick. I even reached out to my building's other tenants asking what they thought and I know at least one guy did install a TV on the same kind of mount and on the exact same wall. He apparently had no issues. What is the wall you were working on here? Concrete? How thick beneath the slats?
Hi there, thank you for this video. We have installed wooden panels but did not locate the studs, the panels are directly on a drywall, can we still safely mount a 65 inch TV onto the panels by drilling through the dry wall and using butterfly anchors?
@@susanhau-lewis9447 I wouldn't do that with purely adhesive installation. Try putting a few screws in at the top and the bottom on the load bearing section, then it would be safer this way.
Hi. The sound on this one is good enough for most people. It depends om what you are used to with sound. I have mounted these many times before and most costumers do not use extra sound.
The sound is fine but personally I'd highly recommend additional audio 'upgrades'. If you're watching moves on a big 4K OLED the sound makes a huge difference.
idk if you already made your decision yet but I have the G3 65" and the speakers are (in my opinion) trash. My $500 TCL TV speakers from years ago are better than them. As soon as I turned on a movie it was apparent. I ended up pairing mine with a Sonos Arc + Sub and it's amazing! Amazing TV other than that to say the least though
I have this same setup. G3 77 and GX soundbar which came free with tv. TV sound is pretty normal. Soundbar is a must for such a large screen to get the full cinematic effect. Got a faulty piece where screen went blank in first 10 days. It was replaced by retailer for another brand new one. Second unit is so far good.
I did same setup. Just that my wall Is crooked and with wall panels when the tv is flat the tv doesn’t run parallel to slat. But the tv is level mounted. Be careful With this.
could you tell me what screws you've used for mounting tv bracket to the panels? I've got plaster wall and not sure what screws to get so its all secure
Hi. Its not the screws that is important its the plugs, you need strong enough plugs. This video shows mounting on a plaster wall: ua-cam.com/video/zPkUNFi2oDc/v-deo.html
@@oslotvmontering I’m installing a wood slat panel over a drywall, and an 85” TV that weighs around 90 to 100 lbs. I’m planning on locating the studs before installing the wood panel so I know where to drill for the TV mount. any tips?
@@eliasmontanez Hi. Just remember to mark the studs good, write down where they are, the moment the panel is on you will not find the studs again with a stud finder..
Adjusting was very important for me, because ive probably with Spirit Level. Thx for showing this.
Hi. Thanks for watching. 😊
The cable to the socket is very nice
Given your attention to detail and excellent video quality, include some chit-chat. I am sure that you will have a lot of commentary that we can all learn from. Good job!
Great work. Also, effective at ASMR! Utmerkede sokker 😂
Hehe. Takk 😊
Hi. What's the composition and thickness of the wall? I've installed a wooden slat paneling on a partition wall in my apartment. It's hollow bricks, 20 cm across and this just isn't instilling confidence in me that it can withstand a 65'' LG on a full-motion TV mount. I bought the mount yesterday and intended to use small-diameter hole saw to puncture a series of holes corresponding the rectangle that the mount would be fitted upon. My reasoning was that, if much of the nails' were to be stuck inside the wood rather than the bricks behind the slats, that would translate to a lot of pressure on the wood and it could potentially cause some cracks to develop on the panels below. I don't know how sound that theory is, but that is why I wanted to clear the entire rectangle before doing the nailing, so the mounts's nails could fit wholly inside the bricks.
I had never played around with a hole saw so just tried it out on parts of the leftover paneling from when I was finishing up the apartment a year ago. I'm honestly terrified to apply it to the actual wall: the pieces of wood fly all over the place and the drill gets stuck very easily. I knocked out like 15 cm of it just by trying to drill a hole between two of the protruding slats. I'm tempted to just nail the mount directly on the paneling, but the TV mount alone is damn heavy, later there will of course also be the 16kg worth of TV. I just don't want the whole thing to come crumbling down on some night.
Any suggestions?
Hi. This does not sound safe at all on a full-motion wall mount unfortunately.. Any chance you could mount it on a regular wall mount without full-motion?
@@oslotvmontering It was with full motion in mind that I repositioned my couch a couple of weeks ago, so I could save some floor space (now the couch is standing parallel to the external wall rather than perpendicular to it, which used to drive me insane, and I like the current setup much better), but now it's not going to be reasonable to keep the TV straight upon the wall at all times. From the get-go I assumed it would be tilted horizontally, some 30° degress forward on the left so it faces the corner of the couch (if you image a rectangle with the tilted TV in the upper left corner, then the mirrored L of the couch is in the lower right corner).
The mount itself is solid af, with two arms, and I've checked that I will be able to nail it directly to the panels with 12 cm nails possibly in up to fourteen different spots. There will be a bit over two centimeters of plank wood and then the nail will end halfway through the hollow brick.
I even reached out to my building's other tenants asking what they thought and I know at least one guy did install a TV on the same kind of mount and on the exact same wall. He apparently had no issues.
What is the wall you were working on here? Concrete? How thick beneath the slats?
I heard a cat meow, can you give details on cat? Model, weight etc.
Hi do you no if my 65 inch g1 wall bracket will fit this 77 g3 ?
Hi. Yes, they have the same wall mount. But the bracket comes with the TV so if you buy another one you also get a new bracket.
Hi there, thank you for this video. We have installed wooden panels but did not locate the studs, the panels are directly on a drywall, can we still safely mount a 65 inch TV onto the panels by drilling through the dry wall and using butterfly anchors?
Hi. If the wooden panel is mounted correctly it should be no problem to mount a 65 directly on the panel.
@@oslotvmontering it was mounted with adhesive
@@susanhau-lewis9447 I wouldn't do that with purely adhesive installation. Try putting a few screws in at the top and the bottom on the load bearing section, then it would be safer this way.
where did you get the wood slat wall from ?
Hi. It was custom made for the apartment.
Hi thanks for the video. What is the height of the power outlet from the floor?
Hi. Thanks. I do not have that information unfortunately.
Hi,great tv but could tell us more about sound quality? Some tv’s have very poor quality after hung up on the wall,thanks
this is tv , not HI FI audio system of 10000 watts
Hi. The sound on this one is good enough for most people. It depends om what you are used to with sound. I have mounted these many times before and most costumers do not use extra sound.
The sound is fine but personally I'd highly recommend additional audio 'upgrades'. If you're watching moves on a big 4K OLED the sound makes a huge difference.
idk if you already made your decision yet but I have the G3 65" and the speakers are (in my opinion) trash. My $500 TCL TV speakers from years ago are better than them. As soon as I turned on a movie it was apparent. I ended up pairing mine with a Sonos Arc + Sub and it's amazing! Amazing TV other than that to say the least though
I have this same setup. G3 77 and GX soundbar which came free with tv. TV sound is pretty normal. Soundbar is a must for such a large screen to get the full cinematic effect.
Got a faulty piece where screen went blank in first 10 days. It was replaced by retailer for another brand new one. Second unit is so far good.
I did same setup. Just that my wall
Is crooked and with wall panels when the tv is flat the tv doesn’t run parallel to slat. But the tv is level mounted. Be careful
With this.
Does it come with a stand?
Hi. No..
@@oslotvmontering thanks 👍🏻 you know where can I find it? Or do you know the reference to it?
@@oliverforceofficial Just Google: WMN-A50EB and you will find it in a shop near you.
@@oslotvmontering thank you 🙏🏻
could you tell me what screws you've used for mounting tv bracket to the panels? I've got plaster wall and not sure what screws to get so its all secure
Hi. Its not the screws that is important its the plugs, you need strong enough plugs. This video shows mounting on a plaster wall: ua-cam.com/video/zPkUNFi2oDc/v-deo.html
So, it’s not necessary to find a wall stud to attach the mount if we already have a wooden slat panel? It can be directly on to the panels?
Hi. It depends on the size of the TV and whats behind the wooden slat panel. This costumer had a wall of wood behind it.
@@oslotvmontering I’m installing a wood slat panel over a drywall, and an 85” TV that weighs around 90 to 100 lbs. I’m planning on locating the studs before installing the wood panel so I know where to drill for the TV mount.
any tips?
@@eliasmontanez Hi. Just remember to mark the studs good, write down where they are, the moment the panel is on you will not find the studs again with a stud finder..
@@oslotvmontering Thanks!
18cm?
It sure is nice an easy when you have wooden walls.
Hi. This house was made for wall mounting TVs, all rooms had wooden walls.
Terrible bracket. Has no way to lock the tv at level. Enjoy a lifetime of leveling your tv
Hi. I have mounted hundreds of LG G-series and that has never been an issue.
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