McDuff
8th August 2008, 10:30 PM
Hi Folks,
I'm doing some renos and as part of the process I am having a patch panel put in a cupboard with data and coax cabling to most rooms of the house - lots of nice new data toys. The cabler only has a small time window available when I need the job done but is quite happy for me to do some of the up front grunt work to limit what he has to do on the day.
The house is double brick and I'm going to drill the bricks at the required locations so that I can use flush mount plates rather than those tacky boxes.
I looked at the cost of diamond core bits which were a bit steep for my blood (especially as the only ones I could find South of Adelaide today were in sets of multiple bits most of them much bigger than I will ever need). I'm not sure if my drill would push them anyway!
The cabler suggested that I drill multiple holes in a rectangle pattern with an impact drill and then break the middle out with a cold chisel.
First, is he right? Is it achieveable that way in my lifetime? Or is he indulging himself in a little tradesman's whimsy at my expense?
If so, what size and type of masonry bit should should I use? Many smallish holes, or a smaller number of bigger ones? How far apart should the holes be for an "easy" break out of the centre? I have seven locations to do in the next week, so I guess at least 100 - 200 holes all up... How many bits will I go through?
I have an ancient Ryobi HPD-18VR impact drill (about 550W) which has given me good service for many years - will this do? I have used it for the occasional hole for a dynabolt in the past and it has coped just fine, but hundreds of holes will be more of a challenge.
If I drill the holes close enough will the centre come free in a single piece? And in that case can I attach a bolt and some string so I can fish out the lump?
I guess the bottom line is I want to do this job right and am willing to get whatever tools and consumables I need to achieve that - but I don't want it to turn into a case of "The Gas Man Commeth" (does anyone else remember Flanders and Swann?). Do I just grit my teeth and get the core bits and tell myself it's an investment in quality tools for the future?
I'm sure some of you have been down this road and have solved it in wierd and creative ways - c'mon: fess up!
Cheers, Dieter.
I'm doing some renos and as part of the process I am having a patch panel put in a cupboard with data and coax cabling to most rooms of the house - lots of nice new data toys. The cabler only has a small time window available when I need the job done but is quite happy for me to do some of the up front grunt work to limit what he has to do on the day.
The house is double brick and I'm going to drill the bricks at the required locations so that I can use flush mount plates rather than those tacky boxes.
I looked at the cost of diamond core bits which were a bit steep for my blood (especially as the only ones I could find South of Adelaide today were in sets of multiple bits most of them much bigger than I will ever need). I'm not sure if my drill would push them anyway!
The cabler suggested that I drill multiple holes in a rectangle pattern with an impact drill and then break the middle out with a cold chisel.
First, is he right? Is it achieveable that way in my lifetime? Or is he indulging himself in a little tradesman's whimsy at my expense?
If so, what size and type of masonry bit should should I use? Many smallish holes, or a smaller number of bigger ones? How far apart should the holes be for an "easy" break out of the centre? I have seven locations to do in the next week, so I guess at least 100 - 200 holes all up... How many bits will I go through?
I have an ancient Ryobi HPD-18VR impact drill (about 550W) which has given me good service for many years - will this do? I have used it for the occasional hole for a dynabolt in the past and it has coped just fine, but hundreds of holes will be more of a challenge.
If I drill the holes close enough will the centre come free in a single piece? And in that case can I attach a bolt and some string so I can fish out the lump?
I guess the bottom line is I want to do this job right and am willing to get whatever tools and consumables I need to achieve that - but I don't want it to turn into a case of "The Gas Man Commeth" (does anyone else remember Flanders and Swann?). Do I just grit my teeth and get the core bits and tell myself it's an investment in quality tools for the future?
I'm sure some of you have been down this road and have solved it in wierd and creative ways - c'mon: fess up!
Cheers, Dieter.