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Cable clips on stone wall



 
 
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  #51  
Old September 15th 10, 04:36 AM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
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Posts: 867
Default Cable clips on stone wall

On Sep 14, 11:47*pm, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:
In article
,
* wrote:

You just wouldn't believe it!
I don't keep the recently discussed pin plugs in the van, but have
decided to do so, despite thinking that they will only get used once a
blue moon. Then today, in a place 80 miles from home that takes an
hour to get into and an hour to get out of, I found that I had to clip
a cable 50ft along a concrete internal wall. There was no chance of
clips going in -- the wall was so hard it was actually slow to drill.
Push in cable tie holders and ties would have looked dreadful. In the
end I cut the heads of some push-ins and used the stems as pin plugs.
It worked fine.


Sounds like a job for SDS man.


Bosch 24VRE, new SDS bit, new battery. Operative a bit worn out
though.

Bill
  #54  
Old September 15th 10, 06:00 PM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
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Posts: 867
Default Cable clips on stone wall

On Sep 15, 10:59*am, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:
In article
,
* wrote:





On Sep 14, 11:47 pm, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:
In article
,
* wrote:


You just wouldn't believe it! I don't keep the recently discussed
pin plugs in the van, but have decided to do so, despite thinking
that they will only get used once a blue moon. Then today, in a
place 80 miles from home that takes an hour to get into and an hour
to get out of, I found that I had to clip a cable 50ft along a
concrete internal wall. There was no chance of clips going in -- the
wall was so hard it was actually slow to drill. Push in cable tie
holders and ties would have looked dreadful. In the end I cut the
heads of some push-ins and used the stems as pin plugs. It worked
fine.


Sounds like a job for SDS man.

Bosch 24VRE, new SDS bit, new battery. Operative a bit worn out
though.


You need a decent mains SDS for hard materials. Battery ones ain't got the
oomph. But I do realise the problems there in your job.


I don't have problems drilling any material, within reason. I would
use a 110V SDS drill for repeated work using large diameter SDS bits
or for a masonry-cutting core drill, but for anything upto 18mm
diameter the 24V DC drill is fine. When I said drilling the holes in
concrete was 'slow' I didn't mean it took ages, just that it was a bit
slower than drilling brick, perhaps 8 to 12 secs for an 8mm x 30mm
hole. I drilled 50 of the ******* things anyway!

Modern battery SDS drills are very good.

Bill
  #55  
Old September 15th 10, 06:27 PM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
Stuart Noble
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Posts: 20
Default Cable clips on stone wall

On 15/09/2010 17:00, wrote:
On Sep 15, 10:59 am, "Dave Plowman
wrote:
In article
,
wrote:





On Sep 14, 11:47 pm, "Dave Plowman
wrote:
In article
,
wrote:


You just wouldn't believe it! I don't keep the recently discussed
pin plugs in the van, but have decided to do so, despite thinking
that they will only get used once a blue moon. Then today, in a
place 80 miles from home that takes an hour to get into and an hour
to get out of, I found that I had to clip a cable 50ft along a
concrete internal wall. There was no chance of clips going in -- the
wall was so hard it was actually slow to drill. Push in cable tie
holders and ties would have looked dreadful. In the end I cut the
heads of some push-ins and used the stems as pin plugs. It worked
fine.


Sounds like a job for SDS man.
Bosch 24VRE, new SDS bit, new battery. Operative a bit worn out
though.


You need a decent mains SDS for hard materials. Battery ones ain't got the
oomph. But I do realise the problems there in your job.


I don't have problems drilling any material, within reason. I would
use a 110V SDS drill for repeated work using large diameter SDS bits
or for a masonry-cutting core drill, but for anything upto 18mm
diameter the 24V DC drill is fine. When I said drilling the holes in
concrete was 'slow' I didn't mean it took ages, just that it was a bit
slower than drilling brick, perhaps 8 to 12 secs for an 8mm x 30mm
hole. I drilled 50 of the ******* things anyway!

Modern battery SDS drills are very good.

Bill


So I guess you're allowed to clamber about on roofs without the need for
scaffolding? I know roofers and chimney sweeps do it all the time, but
is there some kind of cut off point beyond which HSE requires scaffolding?
  #56  
Old September 15th 10, 09:41 PM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
[email protected]
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Posts: 867
Default Cable clips on stone wall

On Sep 15, 5:27*pm, stuart noble wrote:
On 15/09/2010 17:00, wrote:
So I guess you're allowed to clamber about on roofs without the need for
scaffolding? I know roofers and chimney sweeps do it all the time, but
is there some kind of cut off point beyond which HSE requires scaffolding?- Hide quoted text -


I'm not sure how we got here from a discussion about battery drills,
but we have to obey H & S like everyone else. There are certain
activities where scaffolding would be essential, certain ones where it
wouldn't contribute to safety, and ones where it's debatable. We tend
to use access machinery more than scaffolding because the work is
usually of short duration.

Bill
  #57  
Old September 16th 10, 12:58 AM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
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Posts: n/a
Default Cable clips on stone wall

On 15 Sep,
stuart noble wrote:

So I guess you're allowed to clamber about on roofs without the need for
scaffolding? I know roofers and chimney sweeps do it all the time, but
is there some kind of cut off point beyond which HSE requires scaffolding?


A risk assessment needs to be made. If the job takes more than half an hour a
ladder is unacceptable for access so scaffolding or cherry picker is needed,
or else (for window cleaners etc.) a system for doing the job from ground
level.

--
B Thumbs
Change lycos to yahoo to reply
  #60  
Old September 16th 10, 10:05 AM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv,uk.d-i-y
Andy Burns[_7_]
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Posts: 1,268
Default Cable clips on stone wall

stuart noble wrote:

On 15/09/2010 20:41, wrote:

I'm not sure how we got here from a discussion about battery drills,


That's usenet for you


Dunno if Bill's spotted the xpost to uk.d-i-y? No recommendations for
angle grinders to remove rusted cable clips yet ...
 




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