Hello! My first post here. I'm going to replace the kitchen at Easter and plan to frame on a plastered concrete wall where the kitchen will then be mounted. The fastening in the plastered brick wall must be of the absolutely strongest kind since the whole kitchen will hang on it. There are also many cavities in the wall when drilling.

The strongest tips for mounting 2-by-2 studs are gratefully received.

Best regards,
Johan Rex
 
I usually use standard plastic plugs (brown or blue) or nail plugs, but before I insert the plug, I spray pl400 into the hole. Preferably after vacuuming the hole.
 
Larsa Larsa said:
I usually use regular plastic plugs (brown or blue) or nail plugs, but before I insert the plug, I spray PL400 into the hole. Preferably after vacuuming the hole.
Hi!
Thanks for the answer - do you let the PL400 mixture dry with the plug before you insert the screw
 
No, pull the screw directly, then when it has dried it can handle the load.
 
JRX JRX said:
Hello! My first post here. I'm going to replace the kitchen during Easter and will be attaching furring strips to a plastered concrete wall where the kitchen will then be mounted.
The fastening in the plastered brick wall must be of the absolute strongest kind since the entire kitchen will hang from it.
There are a lot of voids in the wall when you drill as well.

The strongest tips for mounting 2x2 furring strips are gratefully received.

Best regards,
Johan Rex
Recently did a kitchen renovation for the son in the family. Everything was "red brick" and plaster. Used anchor epoxy for everything. You should be able to hang the house on these fastenings without anything happening.
Threaded rod in the holes and everything is set.
Maybe overkill but extremely durable.
Go for it!(y)
 
Ignore colored plastic plugs and makeshift solutions. :D

Use a high-quality facade plug made of nylon and include the render in the "useful length". That is, 45mm plus the render plus 70mm for a standard facade plug.
 
Thank you for the good answer!
It will be Ankarmassa and plugs.
Now it's Easter and time to build.
 
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