The Wife bought a new TV

The bolts are supposed to support 50 pounds each. I used seven of them (I over-tightened one, and broke the flange) instead of four lag bolts. That should be sufficient. There is no reason to extend the TV away from the wall, so there is not that large a moment acting on the wall plate. Also, there is no drywall. If we had drywall, I could find the studs.

.

Umm, no it isn’t. You need a Romex-grade power cable running from a standard junction box or breaker panel to a standard outlet box. The power cable needs to be attached (stapled) at suitable intervals and near the boxes. Etc. Etc.

Basically an in-wall extension cord is a bad idea.

I installed cable plates with mine. One behind the TV and one behind the component stand.

Recessed Low Voltage Cable Plate

My power cord was long enough to reach through, but I could have bought a longer one on Amazon too.

:slight_smile:

“Wall mounting” – so that’s what the kids are calling it these days.

As far as I can tell it is romex and definitely not an in-wall extension cord. They claim that it’s code compliant and I found the product based on several articles saying that it is. If you feel it’s not please provide a cite saying so.

Not a great idea either. Standard power cords aren’t rated for in wall use.

I speak from experience on this. I installed a ~50 pound floating TV unit with dry wall anchors totaling 300 lbs of rated load. Everything was fine until it fell down a few hours after I installed it. If you read the fine print of that load rating, you will find it is rated for flush to the wall. Here for example:

http://www.homedepot.com/p/E-Z-Ancor-Twist-N-Lock-50-lb-Drywall-Anchors-with-Screws-25-Pack-25200/100133106

The link went to a version of the product that definitely doesn’t have Romex. Apparently another version does. But still there would be issues with proper boxes and securing the wire. The latter is impossible to do without ripping out some of the wall for most people. (I actually have an exposed wall on the other side, allowing “easy” install of Romex and boxes, but since I am not a licensed electrician I opted not to get into all that.)

Hey, priorities! The important thing is you’ve got a great new TV to watch while you sip your hot chocolate!

And we happen to have some. :slight_smile:

Oh please. This isn’t rocket science. You can run a power cord through a non-insulated wall a few feet without issue. There is nothing dangerous about it. I’ve done it in all 4 wall-mounted TV installations in my house.

I’ve never understood why securing NM electrical wiring to a stud is not a terrible idea, even though it’s code. Seems to me an easy way to get electrocuted if you miss a stud by a hair while trying to mount a hanger or whatever.