Single track set for wall. Single track end closing set. Set for panel curtains. Corner piece, single track. Glider and hook. Room divider for corner. Single and triple track set. Wall fitting 6 cm. Panel curtain holder 60 cm.
Wall fitting 12 cm. Curtain rods Track systems Curtain wires. What is the difference between curtain poles and curtain tracks? Why choose a ceiling curtain track system? Back to top Share. If the wall is painted I'm am not a fan of the screw-in hooks, inevitably the bike ends up pressing on the wall and marking it. Better to buy a proper suspended rack and hang the bike on that. Or make your own, add a second cross piece lower down to brace on and a couple of timber triangles will work fine.
There are a heap of very pretty DIY solutions here , you could do this one with a couple of bits of 2x4" at each end if you don't want to spend the time on shelves:.
Since you want a vertical stand something like this might work, and could even be arranged so the saddle doesn't quite touch the wall. That would make it less likely that you'd mark the wall. As Daniel says, this is the same idea as the Kvartal holder you're asking about. If you're lucky this will fit on the short wall behind the door, otherwise it'll block off half the room. Note that I'm suggesting wheels-out so the dirty parts are in the middle of the room. You might prefer to mark the wall rather than have wet, dirty wheels in the middle of the room.
IME drywall screws will not work, drywall just isn't structural. The electrical panel right there also gives me pause, even hooking a cable with a drywall screw could be bad either by pulling the sharp edge of the screw through the insulation, or just pinching the cable and starting a fire. But mostly, to work well enough to hold even a light bicycle you'd need to carefully arrange them to get the forces right, otherwise you're going to tear the hole or rip one out of the wall.
Screwing a board to the studs, then the rack to the board is a better solution. One last question: does it fit in this way round? I assume you've tried, but if that works it's the least effort option. You might want to tape a bit of card to the wall where the front tyre hits and by the rear axle and rear tyre if it does work. Edit: Another Option: Would this fit on the wall beside the door? If so, then if there is no stud where it needs to be mounted, place a length of wood between the door and corner, screw that into the wall studs and mount the hook anywhere you like.
Put your bike in with the rear wheel behind the water heater; it will fit further into the room that way. Another zero cost option is to take the front wheel off, but that could become a pain if your bike has as most bikes seem to these days lawyer lips. Another low cost option is to use sorry, no pictures the 3M or similar adhesive velcro patches that are designed for hanging pictures. I recently installed some in a friend's house that were rated at 10kg that's more than that carbon bike weighs.
They have the advantage of being removable. This would be the cleanest and quickest way to do this, but for heavier bikes you risk pulling a huge chunk of drywall out so I'd recommend method two I'd especially avoid using any sort of hollow wall anchors to suspend anything from a ceiling. Also, given the proximity to your breaker panel, I'd avoid drilling large holes willy-nilly unless you're sure the wiring is out of the way.
Method two shouldn't cause a problem. If you're lucky the studs will be 16" apart right where you need them. In any case, I'd recommend a quality stud finder again, because of the electrical panel being right there I'd avoid drilling random holes and poking around for studs - in any other room this wouldn't be as big of an issue.
This will allow you to fasten either your linked Ikea brackets, or use large plastic coated lag hooks which will cost much less. Be sure to drill pilot holes for the lag hooks so you don't split the wood. Depending on the internal construction of your wall mine are aerated concrete block with plasterboard - aka drywall - linings, so have something reasonably solid not far behind the plasterboard you might be able to use multi-monti screws, or something similar.
These screws cut a thread into the more solid material behind the plasterboard. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Bicycle Storage: Does Kvartal method need studs or other suggestions?
Ask Question. Asked 7 years, 8 months ago. Active 4 years, 7 months ago. Viewed 4k times. This is the wall I was hoping it would fit across: It doesn't: Here's the wall I think I think the Kvartal method or something similar could work on. Think doing it without being in studs will work? Or anyone have another idea that might work? Improve this question.
Ryan Ryan 4 4 silver badges 13 13 bronze badges. That technique would need studs, since the bike will apply considerable outward force on the wall, such that hollow-wall anchors will eventually fail.
Either use one of the "rail" systems that would allow you to anchor to studs, or use a piece of wood to accomplish the same thing. Actually, on a second look at your link, I see the rear wheel is resting on the ground, so relatively little outward force would be applied to the wall. In that case the hollow wall anchors similar to what WTHarper suggests should be fine. I don't think even with the rear wheel sitting on the ground that I'd be comfortable not using studs. Even with the wheel on the ground, you don't want the stand ripping out of the wall if you bump the bike.
Or hang a rain jacket on it. That was quite a difficult question for me to understand at first. I did not anticipate that there is no brick or concrete wall behind the outer surface of your wall. And thus that stud referred to a vertical member in the wall, below the dry wall. Perhaps you might add that? Show 1 more comment. Active Oldest Votes. There are a heap of very pretty DIY solutions here , you could do this one with a couple of bits of 2x4" at each end if you don't want to spend the time on shelves: Since you want a vertical stand something like this might work, and could even be arranged so the saddle doesn't quite touch the wall.
As Daniel says, this is the same idea as the Kvartal holder you're asking about If you're lucky this will fit on the short wall behind the door, otherwise it'll block off half the room. Improve this answer. Ryan: it looks to me as though turning the front wheel so it sits out around the hot water tank would make it fit. The bike might end up angled slightly too, so the back of the rear wheel is closer to the wall behind the door.
Or flip it round and wedge the rear wheel in behind the tank. But I've added more obvious vertical options to my answer.
0コメント