I actually feel like I get a more sturdy hold by using plastic wall plugs, but I'm pretty sure I'm not supposed to be using those? I'm sick of it being a dice roll whether I can hang something in a specific place or not, so any advice people have on working with lath and plaster walls would be gratefully received. I've hung a few things with hollow-wall anchors that feel sturdy enough, but sometimes I have to give up on a hole. I get he feeling that these things wouldn't be an issue with more modern plasterboard walls. I can usually get the drill bit through eventually, but even then I find that the lath resists the anchor when I try to push it in, which exacerbates the first problem. Not that the lath is strong or thick, but it tends to be flexible enough that it just bounces off my drill bit instead of breaking. Getting through the lath is difficult.The best solution I've found is to hold the plug in place with pliers while turning the screw, but it doesn't seem ideal. The anchors have two teeth that are suppose to grip the surface of the plaster and allow me to turn the screw to shorten and expand the plug, but the surface of the plaster typically crumbles enough that the plug just turns.I'm totally new to the world of hollow-wall anchors, and I have two problems with these: I don't know if that's the term used in the US, but I'm referring to metal plugs that expand within the walls. My problems come when I'm trying to hang less heavy things using hollow wall anchors. I understand that I use studs for heavy things, which is fine, although my stud finder seems to be more of a stud guesser, perhaps due to the thickness of the lath and plaster relative to plasterboard (AKA drywall?). Until buying my house I've always lived in places with solid brick walls, and I didn't know how lucky I was! Now I'm trying to get my head around lath and plaster walls in a Victorian house.
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