Español Français Deutsch Italiano Nederlands Svenska Dansk Japanese Chinese (Simplified) Russian
 
AVForums.com twitter AVForums is a member of CEDIA. THX certified reviewer.  Click for more information. AVForums reviewers are ISF Certified.  Click for more information.
 
The UK's biggest and best home entertainment electronics forums  
4 million visitors each month


Forums Register Blogs Information Social Groups Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Go Back   AVForums.com > Home Cinema Construction and Configuration > Home Cinema DIY

Latest AVForums Movie Reviews
Up Blu-ray ReviewLéon Blu-ray ReviewNear Dark Blu-ray ReviewLogan's Run Blu-ray ReviewTaking of Pelham 1 2 3, The Blu-ray Review
Star Trek Blu-ray ReviewUFC 100: Lesnar vs. Mir (2009) Blu-ray ReviewThe New York Ripper Blu-ray ReviewHeat Blu-ray ReviewMoon Blu-ray Review

Similar Threads
thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Panasonic TX-32LXD500 mount and cabling mega_kas Flat Screen TV Brackets and Mounts 0 13-05-2007 5:56 PM
Plasma Wall Mount - suggestions for neatest install in new-build stud wall? Reg_the_Veg Flat Screen TV Brackets and Mounts 0 26-02-2007 10:34 PM
Wall mount problem - weird mount help needed ! Hawksight Projectors 9 02-08-2005 9:33 AM
Ceiling mount or Wall mount? Heat build up? smashed Projectors 5 28-07-2005 11:36 AM

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 20-11-2008, 2:24 PM   #1 (permalink)
New Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 20
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 3
Cabling for wall mount

Hi guys,

Bit of a DIY novice but always happy to have a go...

Put my 26" up on the bedroom wall last night (stud wall) and it looks great but now i've got to a) hide the power cable and b) get the aerial cable to it....

My questions:

1. Is it safe to run cables through the wall - the stud wall is filled with insulation material and so I don't want to cause a fire or anything...

2. In relation to 1, should I put something in the wall that I can run the cables down, like a small pipe or something? Thought it would make adding more cables down it later easy and should protect from risk of 1. happening?

3. My cable is about 5" short from reaching the power socket. At first I was going to cut the cable and extend it but it sounded a bit dangerous to me. So what I am now thinking of doing is running one of these from the power socket, up through the wall and then stashing it behind the screen. That way I can plug the TV in without having to extend the cable (to save problems if I needed to take it back if it broke) but also gives me options later on if I want to add a DVD / sky box up on the wall..... Anyone got any thoughts on if thats a good / bad idea?

4. Last one.... when i've made holes in the wall and put the cables through the holes, are there caps / covers I can fill the holes with or do people just use filler with the cable just hanging out there?

Cheers guys.

Oh BTW, the mount I got was this one:

Amazon.co.uk: Allcam PLB103S 23"-37" LCD TV Wall Mount Bracket Black Tilt VESA 400x200 200x200: Electronics & Photo

Great price @ £25ish and seems solid.
gk141054 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-11-2008, 3:10 PM   #2 (permalink)
Member
 
Dream Weaver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Lancashire, UK
Posts: 73
Thanks: Gave 15, Got 7
Re: Cabling for wall mount

I've just bought that mount for our 32" Sony in the kitchen, and fitted it earlier this week. Really nice mount for the money, and the tilt action is really good.

My wall is thermalite block, so I can't advise you on the stud wall issue as I just chased all my cables into the wall under capping (conduit for the speaker cables) and am about to start plastering the wall back in.
Dream Weaver is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-11-2008, 9:02 PM   #3 (permalink)
Member
 
Magslad's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: South Bucks, UK
Posts: 885
Thanks: Gave 145, Got 145
Re: Cabling for wall mount

Quote:
Originally Posted by gk141054 View Post
1. Is it safe to run cables through the wall - the stud wall is filled with insulation material and so I don't want to cause a fire or anything...

2. In relation to 1, should I put something in the wall that I can run the cables down, like a small pipe or something? Thought it would make adding more cables down it later easy and should protect from risk of 1. happening?

3. My cable is about 5" short from reaching the power socket. At first I was going to cut the cable and extend it but it sounded a bit dangerous to me. So what I am now thinking of doing is running one of these from the power socket, up through the wall and then stashing it behind the screen. That way I can plug the TV in without having to extend the cable (to save problems if I needed to take it back if it broke) but also gives me options later on if I want to add a DVD / sky box up on the wall..... Anyone got any thoughts on if thats a good / bad idea?

4. Last one.... when i've made holes in the wall and put the cables through the holes, are there caps / covers I can fill the holes with or do people just use filler with the cable just hanging out there?

Cheers guys.
1. Yes - perfectly safe to run cables through the stud wall. A standard power cable and coax cable will only generate very minimal heat, certainly nowhere near enough to be a danger. Just be sure that you what whether there is anything else (pipes/cables etc) in the wall before you start drilling holes - best way is to use a cable/stud detector.

2. You don't need to do this from a fire protection point of view, but might be a good idea anyway - like you say, if you think you might want to run other cables there in the future, it avoids you having to drill more holes. You might want to leave a piece of string/cord in the pipe once you've done it, that way you have something to act as a pull cord if you feed any cables in the future

3. That would work fine. If it was me I would put an extension socket on the wall behind the TV, then it won't be hanging loose, but you could just use an extension lead and screw it to the wall, does the same job

4. I'm using brush faceplates to hide the exit points for my cables - you can get them in chrome etc but you can also get standard white ones from places like Wickes now - here. They do neaten up the exit points nicely, and number of people on the forums have used them. If you have just single cables coming out then you can alternatively use the cable grommets that Sky installers use - just go onto ebay and search for something like "sky cable grommet" and you should find some options.

Hope that helps
__________________
Nikon D80; Nikon VRII 18-200mm & 50mm 1.8; Tamron 90mm Macro; Sigma 50-500mm EX DG
Onkyo TX-SR606; KEF 5005.2's; Panny 42PZ80B/BD30/DMR-EX78; NAD 304; Tannoy 607's; Harmony One

My loft conversion home cinema thread
Magslad is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 21-11-2008, 4:34 PM   #4 (permalink)
Member
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Auchenblae
Posts: 154
Thanks: Gave 9, Got 21
Re: Cabling for wall mount

#4 I used some 'desk cable grommets' (pinched from some desks that were being skipped during an office refurb) on an install recently. You can also get these from the usual online auction sites or search for them using giggle. They are probably a bit more capacious than the sky grommets, and are easier to put additional cables in/out etc as you can actually pass a full sized 13 amp plug, scart end etc through them. They take a coat of paint as well.
nacmacfeegle is offline   Reply With Quote



Bookmarks

Tags
cabling, mount, wall
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT. The time now is 4:36 PM.

AV Forums
Optimised for Firefox.
RSS Feed
AVForums.com is owned and operated by M2N Limited.
Copyright © 2000-2009 M2N E. & O. E.
Global Gold
Web Hosting