Installing a cistern

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Hello, I am replacing an old plastic cistern with a heavier ceramic one. Can I hang it on the plasterboard? There are no studs in a useful position, but screwing on to timber would mean cutting off plasterboard and installing studs then replacing plasterboard.
 
Is this a high or low level cistern?
If it's high wear a crash hemet when you use the bog. :lol:
 
You could fix a board to the studs over the plasterboard, paint it white (or whatever colour your bathroom is) then hang the cistern.
 
Belt and braces. Use proper fixings in the cistern holes and use a pair of brackets, also with proper fixings. The bigger the better.
As previously, there will not be a lot of weight difference between the plastic and pot cistern.

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That's not belt and braces! Belt and braces is puitting noggins in and screwing them to that. You know it makes sense, that cistern could be on the wall for the next 30 years or more. :wink:
 
That's not belt and braces! Belt and braces is puitting noggins in and screwing them to that. You know it makes sense, that cistern could be on the wall for the next 30 years or more.
Not if it's not fitted correctly.
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Or proper, weight-spreading plasterboard fixings.

By the way, a horizontal beam is a nogginG. :wink:

And, the OP said he didn't have easy access behind the plasterboard.
 
I'm a scouser not some posh pufter from darn sarf, it's a noggin to me. :lol:
The op said he didn't want to remove the plasterboard to get behind it, not quite the same thing. That's up to him, but he asked for advice and if he wants to do it right that's what he should do.
 
I have a tendency towards overkill and I thought if you had all said "plasterboard? no problem, you could hang a bath off it" that would settle that, but my overall impression now is "better safe than sorry." Thanks for all your replies, Alan. ps What does OP stand for?
 
OP can mean 2 things: Original poster, i.e. the person starting the thread, or Original Post, meaning the first post in a thread.
 

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