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screw backing

FredWanaker

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Mar 27, 2021
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NorCal
unusual situation. The exhaust vent for the water heater goes straight up thru the drywall on the ceiling, thru the attic and out the roof into a standard vent hat. The vent stack is double walled. There is a framed box on the attic side around the vent hole in the drywall. A piece of sheet metal covers part of the hole on the drywall where the vent tubing passes thru it. Standard fire stop. The screws that hold the sheet metal are pretty loose after three or four water heaters, anode rod changes etc. Normally I would just pull the stack out, reinforce the top side where the screws pass thru with something the screws could bite into but this is a major pain now because the roofers strapped the vent stack at the top, and the plumber put sheet metal screws into the locking pieces of the vent, so to repair it I would need to crawl around in the attic thru 22" of new insulation that was put in last year. I'd like to just inject the screw holes with something that hardens enough that the screws will bite. I thought about RTV but I think it is too soft, Epoxy is too hard, and drywall compound will just fracture I think. I may have already tried the wooden slivers method last time. anyone think of a non-flammable fix that would allow the screws to hold but also to allow the screws to be taken out next time? Something like Gorilla glue would work this time but I think it would make it impossible to remove the screws next time with a glob of glue struck to the screws. Any ideas?
 
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egdede

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Dec 20, 2009
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I can't envision it all (I can only imagine 2 things at one time). But, if you can get epoxy in there and drill a pilot hole you should be good.
 
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FredWanaker

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I can't envision it all (I can only imagine 2 things at one time). But, if you can get epoxy in there and drill a pilot hole you should be good.
just think of a piece of wood behind drywall where the screws going into both are lightly stripped. I can't get above the drywall to replace the wood or even verify it is there. That said, injecting epoxy and then pilot holes might work as long as the screws don't bind up so bad trying to thread them they tear the piece of epoxy loose. Maybe drilling larger holes then epoxying plastic sleeves or soft wood dowels in those holes might work.
 

58Yeoman

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Oct 1, 2010
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Central IL
We have a wooden lazy susan on the dining table, and it has one screw from the bottom going through the bearing into the top. If we turned it backwards, the screw backed out. I took it apart and saw the screw hole was enlarged a bit. I used a slightly larger screw, but put gorilla glue in the hole before screwing it in. It's held up nicely since.
 
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yatg

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Aug 16, 2019
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Location
Southern Oregon
Too many words.
"I need something to repair loose screw holes in drywall".

if your drywall is still good, try these and glue them in with polyurethane adhesive. get some shorter #7 screws since you're only holding up sheet metal.

 
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FredWanaker

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Joined
Mar 27, 2021
Messages
1,470
Location
NorCal
Too many words.
"I need something to repair loose screw holes in drywall".

if your drywall is still good, try these and glue them in with polyurethane adhesive. get some shorter #7 screws since you're only holding up sheet metal.

thanks - that looks like a good simple solution.
 
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