Can you put a drywall anchor in spackle?

Tiny nail and screw holes are easiest: Use a putty knife to fill them with spackling or wall joint compound. Allow the area to dry, then sand lightly. Anything larger must be covered with a bridging material for strength before patching compound can be applied.Click to see full answer. In respect to this, can you…

Tiny nail and screw holes are easiest: Use a putty knife to fill them with spackling or wall joint compound. Allow the area to dry, then sand lightly. Anything larger must be covered with a bridging material for strength before patching compound can be applied.Click to see full answer. In respect to this, can you screw into drywall spackle?Tiny nail and screw holes are easiest: Use a putty knife to fill them with spackling or wall joint compound. Allow the area to dry, then sand lightly. Anything larger must be covered with a bridging material for strength before patching compound can be applied. For holes between 1/2 and 11/2 in.Subsequently, question is, can you screw into joint compound? The joint compound is only about a quarter or half an inch thick. Yes you can put a screw/anchor into a repaired hole, especially if the repair is a superficial one as you describe. Be sure to drill a pilot hole first, and use an appropriate size anchor and screw. In this regard, is spackle as strong as drywall? Spackle is overall stronger than drywall compound, but not user friendly. If you are repairing nail holes or small defects in drywall lightweight spackle will do and usually can be painted in 30 min. or less. If you are replacing a piece of drywall you will have to use drywall compound.How big of a hole can you spackle?Spackle can be used to repair holes less than 4 inches (10 cm) in diameter. Anything larger than that, and the spackle won’t be strong enough to support itself and will collapse inward. Larger holes will require support like mesh or wire and joint compound to be properly repaired.

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