Tv Wall Mount 32 To 100 Instructions — Equatech Universal

Leo stood there, holding his brand new 85-inch TV. It was magnificent. It was also terrifying. His old stand groaned under the weight. “Time to channel my inner contractor,” he muttered, opening the box.

The Ballad of the Big Screen (And How It Didn’t Fall Off the Wall)

He looked at the leftover screws and shrugged. “Every man has a drawer for these.”

Leo stepped back. The TV floated perfectly. No sag. No wobble. He hid the cables in the built-in clips on the arms. equatech universal tv wall mount 32 to 100 instructions

The Equatech manual? He kept it behind the TV. Because one day, he’ll need to unlock those straps and upgrade to a 100-inch.

Now, the scary part. Leo hung the TV’s arms onto the wall plate’s top lip. It clicked. He let go with sweaty palms. It held.

Leo grabbed a stud finder. Not the cheap magnetic one—the beeping kind. His wall had drywall, but a 100-pound TV needs wood. Leo stood there, holding his brand new 85-inch TV

He marked two studs, 16 inches apart. He held the up, level in hand (critical!), and marked the pilot holes. “If this isn’t level,” he whispered, “my TV will look like a drunk pirate’s painting.”

He drilled into the studs using the provided lag bolts. Not too tight—just until the washer kissed the metal. If he hit drywall only, he’d use the included heavy-duty anchors, but for 100 inches? Studs or bust.

Back to the TV. Leo found the M6 screws fit perfectly. But they were too long—they’d bottom out and crack the screen’s circuit board. So he grabbed the from the kit. These little tubes saved his TV’s life. His old stand groaned under the weight

He attached the to the TV’s VESA holes. Tight, but not Hulk-tight.

Pro tip from the story: If the back of your TV is curved or has a bump, use the longer spacers. If it’s flat, no spacers.