- Nov 27, 2001
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First of all, ladies, if you're expecting to see some hunky dudes putting in speakers, that's the wrong kind of stud. But there's a thread for that. 
So, terrible joke out of the way, I've got a 16'x11' room that I'm planning on switching to a wall mount for my TV and using in-wall speakers instead of floor-standing speakers. Yes, I know the sound quality isn't as good, but I'm not really worried about that. My problem comes from the fact that I'd like to mount my TV in the center, but there's a stud (with 16" spacing) directly in the center, which means I can't mount the center channel directly below.
In doing some research, I've seen people mention that it's possible to cut out a portion of the stud, and create a cross brace connecting the severed stud to the two next to it. You can see an example of that in this photo. However, whenever someone mentioned that, there was always one big caveat... that's only for walls that aren't load bearing. I'm about 95% sure that the wall in question is load bearing given that my house is fairly rectangular and this wall runs parallel to the long side. It's also directly in the middle, which is where the initial supports are in the crawl space (there were two more sets of supports added later on in between the center and the outside walls).
So, ultimately, my question is... does anyone have a good solution? From what I can muster, my options are...
Thoughts?
So, terrible joke out of the way, I've got a 16'x11' room that I'm planning on switching to a wall mount for my TV and using in-wall speakers instead of floor-standing speakers. Yes, I know the sound quality isn't as good, but I'm not really worried about that. My problem comes from the fact that I'd like to mount my TV in the center, but there's a stud (with 16" spacing) directly in the center, which means I can't mount the center channel directly below.
In doing some research, I've seen people mention that it's possible to cut out a portion of the stud, and create a cross brace connecting the severed stud to the two next to it. You can see an example of that in this photo. However, whenever someone mentioned that, there was always one big caveat... that's only for walls that aren't load bearing. I'm about 95% sure that the wall in question is load bearing given that my house is fairly rectangular and this wall runs parallel to the long side. It's also directly in the middle, which is where the initial supports are in the crawl space (there were two more sets of supports added later on in between the center and the outside walls).
So, ultimately, my question is... does anyone have a good solution? From what I can muster, my options are...
- Continue to use an external speaker by building a shelf on the wall directly beneath the TV where the in-wall speaker would have been.
- Shift the TV over so it's no longer directly over a stud.
- Shift the center channel over so the TV remains over a stud, but the center channel is not.
Thoughts?
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