Using a level determine the desired height of the display before attempting to install the wall mount.
Mounting on a concrete wall.
Mark all the screw holes that line up with the mortar joints with a pencil.
Each anchor consists of an unthreaded pin set into a metal sleeve.
When mounting on a concrete wall that has plasterboard on it you indicate above to use a 4 inch anchor rather than the 3 inch.
In hard dense materials like concrete or stone this minimum 1 in.
Cut out and install the wall boxes that will be used for cabling.
Hold a mounting bracket against the wall so that the top is even with the shelf line at the point you marked for a bracket.
If they are near a mortar line or seam in the concrete move the bracket slightly.
It should be a fairly tight fit.
When in this situation are you suggesting to achieve a 3 inch embedment of the anchor roughly into the concrete with the remaining inch effectively spanning from the face of the concrete to the face of the plasterboard.
Masonry and concrete anchor types are considered light duty medium duty or heavy duty based on how much weight they can support.
Just a drill and a piece of wood will.
Position the bracket so the screw holes line up the mortar joints between the blocks as close to the center of the marks as possible.
If not place a small pencil mark at the spot the mounting hole meets the wall.
Attaching the mount to the brick fireplace is the next step.
Concrete anchors types vary and include concrete screws hammer set anchors lag shields lead screw anchors plastic wall plugs anchor bolts and more.
Drop the anchor into the hole in your fixture and hammer the pin on the top of the anchor to drive it into the concrete hole you drilled earlier.
The installation of a tapcon concrete screw is also straightforward.
Screw embedment will work fine.
For attaching something relatively light to concrete it s hard to beat the speed and ease of hammer set anchors.
I am showing a cheap trick when you don t want to spend the money on expensive dowels or specialized mounting devices.
Hammer the anchor into the hole in the concrete.
Drill through a couple of mounting holes into the concrete using a hammer drill and masonry bit.
Look at where the mounting holes in the bracket line up.
Select a screw length to penetrate the concrete at least 1 in.
Hold the mounting bracket against the wall within the borders of the marks made in step 1.
Continue to hammer the anchor down until the nut and washer are tight against the fixture.