Good job, but I don't trust anchors on drywall. A longer french cleat that hits 2 studs, or shorter cleat on one stud at the center and two screws with anchors on each side just to balance. Toggle bolt also works on the cleat.
Very useful! I'm making this with a small addition, one of the screws on the wall mount goes trough a slot instead of a hole, so the tv can be ajusted slightly (my walls are terrible, drills tend to "float" trough them while drilling). Thank you!
guys just put any tape on the place where you want to drill or use the drill holder like the milescraft or give a punch with screw or something to make a quick hole into the wall than continue the mission be creative ^_^
Nice solution, You could use a rectangular-shaped metal plate (maybe cut from a flat bar) with two holes to join the two planks of wood (in place of the washers) to lock it in place after mounting.
Now tv’s are getting lighter, I think I will make a bit larger board on the wall. I like the single board across the tv, but if I make the wall board bigger it will be a stronger support for it to lean into. Cool, cool
Não sei quem criou essa solução. Mas ja se usa isso em suportes de Painel para TV e definitivamente é a melhor opção. São poucos furos e os ajustes são mínimos. O unico detalhe é que necessita de um pequeno "calço" na parte inferior para a TV dicar plana pois sem esse calço a TV dica levemente inclinada oara baixo
Having the wall half of the cleat system not connected at a stud seems absurd. It would be much more critical if this TV were any bigger. Would be very easy to have the TV hide the outlet too, again this TV is pretty small, but just some thoughts that other may draw from. I would probably shy away from this idea in general but for a garage or something like this its alright.
Não sei o nome em português, mas em inglês chama-se Miter Gauge. Com isso defines uma medida e como tem uma lâmina na ponta marca a madeira sempre à mesma medida.
Nice! You need a solution for stability though! If a child trys to lift it or maybe if you hit it with your head when you are standing up after you grabbed a DVD, the TV will just pop out
@@pinchertone Haha, You could use a rectangular-shaped metal plate (maybe cut from a flat bar) with two holes to join the two planks of wood (in place of the washers) after mounting the TV.
Don't believe it is. But really most TVs now a days are so light that you don't need to mount to a stud anymore. I know it makes you feel better about it being secure but honestly drywall can hold it. I used to have a plasma that was so heavy you would want to use a stud. But I now have a TV twice the size but half the weight.
@@ASousaMakesIt so you need to paint it to be a bit fire resistant? I mean, when you watch tv for a long period it heats up, right? Maybe attaching metal plate at the back of the tv will do?
@@ASousaMakesIt how is it now? Is the anchor on drywall strong enough ? Im installing bigger flat tv.. Im going to try to utilise all the four holes of tv by using two pieces of wood.. and two pieces on the wall.. just to make sure it will hold better.. thanks!
@@ttcvm7339 its hold just fine, in my case its on concret+bricks.you might need to adapt number of holding points acording de TV size and constrution type
In Portugal the walls are made with bricks and concret, so after 2years the tv is still holding just fine. But yes, is critical that the suport gets well screwed to something adequate for the tv height
So many whiners. Go to a garage sale and buy $20 worth of used tools. You can't conjure up a french cleat via sheer willpower, yes you actually need a saw, a drill and a screwdriver. Even if you bought a prefabricated wall mount from the store you would need at least 2 tools to mount it.
The two washers on each end of the cleat is a great idea. Brilliant.
Best idea i have seen so far for mounting tv to wall.
im sold, this is not only a great idea, but the best i´ve seen so far. thank you
Love the two washers on the sides. That makes to where the tv has to sit in the same position without falling.
Good job, but I don't trust anchors on drywall. A longer french cleat that hits 2 studs, or shorter cleat on one stud at the center and two screws with anchors on each side just to balance. Toggle bolt also works on the cleat.
Very useful! I'm making this with a small addition, one of the screws on the wall mount goes trough a slot instead of a hole, so the tv can be ajusted slightly (my walls are terrible, drills tend to "float" trough them while drilling). Thank you!
Great idea! Just starting this project and was wondering how to address this possible issue.
guys just put any tape on the place where you want to drill or use the drill holder like the milescraft or give a punch with screw or something to make a quick hole into the wall than continue the mission be creative ^_^
Nice solution, You could use a rectangular-shaped metal plate (maybe cut from a flat bar) with two holes to join the two planks of wood (in place of the washers) to lock it in place after mounting.
Now tv’s are getting lighter, I think I will make a bit larger board on the wall. I like the single board across the tv, but if I make the wall board bigger it will be a stronger support for it to lean into. Cool, cool
You're the man! Let's think smarter not harder
Hey love the simplicity of this. Couple of questions. Is that pine 2x4s? And what angle degree - 45°?
Yes pine at 45º
About to make one for my 150lbs 65” tv
It will work, you just need to scale it up
You are a god...Very easy and very useful.
Bem trabalhado ;) grande ideia! Só me faltam essas 1500 máquinas hehehe
@@lobo4302 não percebi amigo... qual a questão mesmo?
Show,tava procurando modelo de suporte pra tv, parabéns e obrigado
Brilliant! I will be doing this soon. Great vid man, subscribed.
I would make a longer wall cleat and use a few more drywall anchors. Like at least 4. Maybe I'm paranoid.
Great, but that cleat on the wall should be longer so yo can slide tv over wall outlet
That's the beauty of this system, this idea is scalable to any need.
Lo probare, ya que mi tv es muyvgrande y pesada. Los soportes se doblan por el peso. Habia pensado hacer esto. Pero me convence tu video, gracias
Aur bhi accha idea aa gaya
Bas tools ki kami hai
Parabéns pela idéia, fiz aqui e deu super certo! Fiquei muito feliz
Clever! Saves me some money on a metal one
Asousa makes it look so easy
Best idea man.
Super
Não sei quem criou essa solução. Mas ja se usa isso em suportes de Painel para TV e definitivamente é a melhor opção. São poucos furos e os ajustes são mínimos. O unico detalhe é que necessita de um pequeno "calço" na parte inferior para a TV dicar plana pois sem esse calço a TV dica levemente inclinada oara baixo
It's very easy , we can make it easily at our home, we don't require lots of tool.
Yes, what matters is the idea( remark the idea of a french cleat is not mine!) . It can be made with an hand saw.
such a simple, perfect, and very helpful idea
Having the wall half of the cleat system not connected at a stud seems absurd. It would be much more critical if this TV were any bigger. Would be very easy to have the TV hide the outlet too, again this TV is pretty small, but just some thoughts that other may draw from. I would probably shy away from this idea in general but for a garage or something like this its alright.
This is brick wall, for "stud wall" I agree that must be a cleat long enough to cover two studs.
Needs a foot on bottom mounting holes
Good work
Muito fixe.
Pergunta de nabo... A ferramenta usada aos 0:54 é para quê?
Abraço
Não sei o nome em português, mas em inglês chama-se Miter Gauge. Com isso defines uma medida e como tem uma lâmina na ponta marca a madeira sempre à mesma medida.
Awesome idea ..
really easy omg this guy
Pra uma tv de 50 seta esse modelo agueta sera a tv amigo
Basta ajustar o tamanho do suporte e fixar com 4 parafusos
@@ASousaMakesIt obrigado pela dica
Excelente ideia!!! Parabéns!!!
Awesome
Very good !
Nice! You need a solution for stability though! If a child trys to lift it or maybe if you hit it with your head when you are standing up after you grabbed a DVD, the TV will just pop out
You could drill a hole through the top to screw the pieces of wood together
Not a chance. The TV/monitor would have to be lifted about an 3/4 of an inch before it would fall out.
@@OMGWTFLOLSMH that's not a lot of inches, is it?
@@pinchertone Haha, You could use a rectangular-shaped metal plate (maybe cut from a flat bar) with two holes to join the two planks of wood (in place of the washers) after mounting the TV.
Thats mounted to a stud right? Could make one with an extending arm?
Don't believe it is. But really most TVs now a days are so light that you don't need to mount to a stud anymore. I know it makes you feel better about it being secure but honestly drywall can hold it. I used to have a plasma that was so heavy you would want to use a stud. But I now have a TV twice the size but half the weight.
No concret/bricks. Here in Portugal 95% of the house are made with concret+bricks
ASousa Makes It thank goodness! I was like, oh no, not plastic anchors!
Simples aonde?
Great idea
For a temporary outdoor tv 👍🏼
Excelente
If you have like 4000 Euros worth of tools you can build this really cheap?
OR YOU CAN BUY A MIRROR MOUNT
All the tools I have weren't bought for this project. You can do this with a handsaw and a drill.
@@ASousaMakesIt I'm only joking it's nice work man I gave you a thumbs up and nice tools by the way.
Awesome!
GREAT VIDEO MAN
Mais un tuga criativo, tenho que secrever ;)
Is it fire safe?
No, its wood without any finish
@@ASousaMakesIt so you need to paint it to be a bit fire resistant? I mean, when you watch tv for a long period it heats up, right? Maybe attaching metal plate at the back of the tv will do?
@@ttcvm7339 It doesn't make sence to do it, all the plastic in the TV is much more inflamable.
@@ASousaMakesIt how is it now? Is the anchor on drywall strong enough ? Im installing bigger flat tv.. Im going to try to utilise all the four holes of tv by using two pieces of wood.. and two pieces on the wall.. just to make sure it will hold better.. thanks!
@@ttcvm7339 its hold just fine, in my case its on concret+bricks.you might need to adapt number of holding points acording de TV size and constrution type
Parabéns!!
Obrigado!
I hate when these guys say DIY but then use pro tools like the table saw or a drill press...
you can do with just a drill and a circular saw
even though you use machines or what. the point is you do it by yourself. right?
Point is he took some inexpensive material and made one himself, instead of purchasing it or having it fabricated.
Pro Tools? LMFAO Dumb ASS!
@@effyou128 Well yeah not everyone has access to drill presses and table saws.
It won’t fall
EXCELLENT
I seriously hope that TV is only 5Lbs or less other wise you'll have a smashed TV on the floor cause you didn't screw your brace into any studs
In Portugal the walls are made with bricks and concret, so after 2years the tv is still holding just fine. But yes, is critical that the suport gets well screwed to something adequate for the tv height
@@ASousaMakesIt esta malta não sabe que existem casas de cimento no planeta terra? 😅
Bom trabalho man
😂
@@ASousaMakesIt preciso de comprar um furador vertical barato. Qual aconselhas?
Super easy to make with super expensive tools😁😁
You are a fucking genius !
Easy if you got the tools
What matters is the idea, you can do it with hand tools.
DOPE
$40 drill but also has a $40 manual screwdriver just saying
"super easy" if you have a whole woodworking setup 🙄
Is not about the tools is the will of doing it. With a handsaw and a drill you can do it.
So many whiners. Go to a garage sale and buy $20 worth of used tools. You can't conjure up a french cleat via sheer willpower, yes you actually need a saw, a drill and a screwdriver. Even if you bought a prefabricated wall mount from the store you would need at least 2 tools to mount it.
Yes bro this is super easy even with basic tools..i dont want to mess around with circular saw..😅
This is not DIY in my taste...coz I dont have that kind of tools... : (