So, to my plan:
A desk is placed on the wall in a small indentation, the top is made of glued wood l * w * h 150 * 60 * 3.5, weighs an estimated 15kg here a small skitze, green = table leg red = heating
The numbers indicate the number of angles planned
My question would be whether the following dowels with the screws and a table leg are sufficient for the table to hold, it is only intended for work on the laptop and written work (additional weight max. 25kg)
These are the aforementioned m10 dowels with screws
Provided there are the right dowels for the corresponding wall and you know how to dowel, then they are enough.
So 40kg total weight + maybe. Briefly stored things and possibly someone who supports themselves with their full body weight at the table. You should now know what material and in what condition the wall is. In principle, you can see that the steel angle can withstand much more than the small dowel. Therefore I would definitely take a bigger one (especially a longer one).
On the left there's a brick outer wall, at the front and right brick partition walls, is that clear?
They are suitable for masonry.
I do not understand. The sketch isā¦ Irritating.š§
It depends on how thick the plaster isā¦
Wuhu
6 angle 6 dowels approx. 35 kg sufficient yes or no
2 things: - house is from 99, there are brick partition walls and on the left is an outside wall
-I would have to drive extra to Hagebau for larger dowels, 45 minutes there and back, I would also have smaller angles there, but that shouldn't be the problem
Do you think that's okay anyway?
If the walls are not plastered so the whole dowel is directly in the brickwork it should be enough. Otherwise I would advise against it and at least take longer ones.
I think it won't work. Quiet and resilient without it sagging and then pulling the dowels out of the wall at some point that doesn't work.
Buy or make a small table with 4 legs and you're done!
The plan is not understandable. The screw (unfortunately not a measure), for a 6 mm screw an 8 mm dowel is sufficient, for 8 mm the 10 mm dowel fits. The table top should be installed in a niche and held on 3 sides with an angle. Do you want the table top to have a table leg in the middle that it can't bend?
Should hold when the dowels hold. Drill brick walls without hammering and I would use better dowels:
https://www.amazon.de/...0011DC5U8/
They also hold in perforated bricks.
and if you install the table leg slant from the bottom rear floor upwards in the middle of the table leg, you have more legroom
You can save them., They don't hold a plate that is 60cm deep
you would need angles for only 25, if not 30cm long sides.
there are extra angles, better try something like that
https://m.hagebau.de/p/geberit-wandkonsole-montagewinkel-b-x-h-x-t-35-x-295-x-7-cm-silberfarben-anP7000085234/?q=Regalwinkel&itemId=B1013972&categoryId=29185788
it costs more, but it also holds for that
Just think about what leverage forces work when the plate is 60cm deep and not supported?
that'll tear the little dowels out of your wall
P.s.:
if you absolutely want to stay at 'small' angles, take a look at dowels for radiatorsā¦ They would be able to withstand thisā¦ Then you only need a drill to drill a larger hole in the angle