A friend asked me to help hang some shelves in her newly acquired home. I have done this many times in my current house and previous homes.
Generally I use wall anchors, as the shelving requires attachment at certain places that may or may not be at a stud.
Specifically, I most often use the “plaster screw”-looking anchors for drywall (similar to the ones here: shorturl.at/qMOYZ ). I’ve never had a problem with them before. I drill a small hole where I want to insert the anchor, then screw the anchor in.
When I attempted to do this at my friend’s house, the anchor would not screw in. It tore up some of the paint (I think?) on the first layers, resulting in the hole looking like it had been ripped / picked at. It looked similar to a screw going into wood causing it to split.
Why is this happening? It occurred numerous times in different places and on different walls [in her house].
I figure the solution is to use a different anchor (like one that is interred and then expands on the opposite side, rather than gripping the plaster/drywall) but I don’t understand why this is happening, and why I’ve never seen it before?
Photo of one of the holes I made trying to drill the anchor in: https://i.imgur.com/pRciIwU.jpg
skinnybuddha t1_j6fpx6y wrote
Those are for wallboard or drywall. The hole looks like it might be plaster or hardiboard, ie not drywall.