… cabinets into the studs, as this photo of our kitchen before drywalling demonstrates. Hitting in the wrong place could cause … problems.
Be careful where you screw
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… cabinets into the studs, as this photo of our kitchen before drywalling demonstrates. Hitting in the wrong place could cause … problems.
Wow. That's a pretty impressive pack of wires. I'd be interested to see an EM reading off that wall
That's what those rectangular metal plates are for – nail stoppers. Nice to see them being used.
+Al Hunt My impression was they were for reinforcing the stud where big holes were drilled through them, but, yeah, they also protect from drilling/screwing/nailing.
+Nick McIntosh Yeah, that's right above the panel, so you're seeing everything that's running to the upstairs or out to the new kitchen.
We took pictures of all the walls before the drywall went up. It is amazing how often we refer to them.
+Dave Hill Nope. They're nail guards (http://www.homedepot.com/p/Halex-1-1-2-in-x-2-1-2-in-Nail-Plates-50-Pack-62899/100151742). Interior studs aren't load bearing, so wouldn't need reinforcement anyway. Centered holes don't weaken a board vertically as much as you'd guess.
A few more armor plates are called for.
This photo (and the one to the right of it) turned out to be incredibly useful.
This is why I’m glad I live in an English 1930s brick built house. I’d worry in a modern house about hanging (or trying to) a cabinet or shelf on just plasterboard, without the added ‘Where’s the wiring?’