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There should be a wall section to screw into behind the brick. I would get longer screws.
Mike
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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I've had the same experience. I found removing the anchors and setting an epoxy in the holes solved the problem.
Shame on the men who can court exemption from present trouble and expense at the price of their own posterity's liberty! - Samuel Adams
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How big is the flag? 40 mph winds are tough on a flag and any mount.
It could be secured with large rubber bands or taken down till after the winds lay down.
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If the anchors are turning in the hole remove them or punch them thru.
Pack the hole with lead,old wheel weights are fine. Now drill a small pilot hole for the screws and run the screws in.
Lead or Rawl plugs made from lead work well in brick.Sometimes expansion anchors will turn in brick and then the hole gets larger.
Tap Cons will work if you drill the brick,not the mortar joint.
mike
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Push come to shove, take a 7/16" x 12" bit and drill the two holes all the way through the wall to the inside- these will be the markers to cut the 14 3/8" wide by 12" tall hole in the inside sheetrock. Take a 2x4 and rip 1/4" off of it. Frame the wall cavity using the ripped 2x4 and fasten it well to the existing studs then cover with a 1/4" steel plate and then cover with sheetrock. Re-drill each hole through the steel plate and sheetrock from the outside. Then run two 7/16" bolts through the flag mount, through the wall and fasten them to the inside using 28 lbs torque. Recess the nuts below the sheetrock- tape and float. You now have a mount that will take the wall out before it breaks.
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he either needs to screw into the solid part of the brick between the holes or he needs to screw into the mortar. He can also try putting a few small nails into the existing hole and then screwing the tapcon in. My old house was brick, I had a flag pole on brick with the screws screwed into the mortar. I had no issues.
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The flag mounts are small and you can see the leverage is all wrong for bearing any shear tugging.
I would bolt the original mount on a larger metal plate (perhaps 6"x6"), then install the larger plate to the wall using good anchors that spread out and in metal not plastic.