Not only that drywall is wobbly and hard to manage.
Patch a wall without studs witha piece of sheet rock.
Use a drywall knife to cover the patch with spackling compound or lightweight joint compound in a crisscross pattern feathering the edges so it blends with the wall.
Find a scrap of drywall that s the same thickness as the damaged drywall and cut out a square cornered patch big enough to cover the hole.
Allow to dry as you work your way through this how to patch drywall project.
Screw these supports vertically behind the opening to keep the patch from cracking.
Draw an x on the wall above the hole and an arrow on the patch that points at the x so you ll know how to orient the patch in step 6.
The first thing you can do is take a shim and put it in the hole.
3 finishing nail and a hammer will do the job.
Place the patch over the hole and pencil its outline on the damaged wall.
To use the patch just clean the wall surface and sand it to give the surface a little tooth then stick the patch over the hole and cover it with two or three thin layers of joint compound.
In most cases tapping a small hole into the wall with a no.
Use a drywall or reciprocating saw to cut out the area within the traced lines image 3.
Immediately apply a thin layer of compound on top of the tape.
You can speed up the process by using setting type compound for the first coat.
The pilot hole ensures that the anchor starts its path into the wall smoothly and hits the location you want to mount it at precisely.
Place drywall piece over the damaged area image 1 and trace around it with a pencil image 2.
Lay a 1 8 in thick bed of patch drywall compound over the joints and press paper tape into the compound with a flexible 6 in.
Cut two pieces of 2x4 slightly larger than the hole.
I then cut a piece of new drywall and screw that into the shim.
Hold the support in place and secure it with drywall screws without driving the screws through the drywall.
I have patched several holes in drywall with no studs.
While holding it try to get a screw through the existing drywall on both sides to hold the shim in place.
It can be tricky since shims are so thin.
You can cut entire lengths of drywall easily even without setting the sheets flat on the floor.
Cutting large sheets 4 x 8 of drywall can be a hassle.
Cut a 1 x 3 inch piece of scrap lumber or 3 4 inch piece of plywood approximately 2 to 4 inches longer than the height of the patch.
Measure the hole then cut a scrap piece of drywall that is slightly larger than the hole s diameter.