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#11
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On Wed, 29 Aug 2012 09:28:06 +0100, Tim Lamb
wrote: In message , Andy Champ writes On 28/08/2012 04:23, Bill Wright wrote: Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. Coincidentally this weekend I was drilling a couple of holes into the wall of my son's place. Unfortunately I hadn't brought my drill with me. Luckily in the bottom of my toolbag was an old rawldrill set my grandfather left me - it seemed to work just fine. (though only two holes!) As a just transferred 11 year old, the height of fun on a winter mornings break was boring holes in the practical centre red brick walls with a copper penny. A year later it was cotton reel tanks! Anyone remember those? regards Oh, yes. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
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#12
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In message , Martin
writes On Wed, 29 Aug 2012 10:48:54 +0100, Peter Duncanson wrote: On Wed, 29 Aug 2012 09:28:06 +0100, Tim Lamb wrote: In message , Andy Champ writes On 28/08/2012 04:23, Bill Wright wrote: Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. Coincidentally this weekend I was drilling a couple of holes into the wall of my son's place. Unfortunately I hadn't brought my drill with me. Luckily in the bottom of my toolbag was an old rawldrill set my grandfather left me - it seemed to work just fine. (though only two holes!) As a just transferred 11 year old, the height of fun on a winter mornings break was boring holes in the practical centre red brick walls with a copper penny. A year later it was cotton reel tanks! Anyone remember those? when I was about 8 or 9. regards Oh, yes. and throwing red hot pennies out of the window of the metal work workshop for little boys to pick up? This progressed to dropping plastic bags full of water from the first floor window. When I were a lad, plastic bags didn't really exist. We had to make do with rubber balloons. [I suppose condoms would have worked too!] Unfortunately, the group of school prefects on whom we chose to drop our water bombs were not amused! -- Ian |
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#13
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"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. If you were to take these complaints at face value you would believe that most British houses were made from bricks that were second only to diamond on the Mohs scale. "You're going to drill right through the wall? You'll have a right job! These bricks are very hard! Very very hard! Hardest bricks there is! Don't ask me why they used such hard bricks!" This belief stems from the use of non-SDS electric drills that have only a ratchet hammer action. Such drills are very inefficient when drilling masonry. It is more comfortable to claim that the bricks are exceptional than to accept that the drill, and by extension yourself, are inadequate. Who wants to go into the house and tell the wife that his tool isn't up to the job? Thus the myth of hard bricks persists. Bill Walls are made of various grades of bricks and their hardness varies: - Engineering bricks - usually purple. Very strong [obviously] and I guess very hard. Facing bricks - usually smooth - more vitrified - very hard. Common bricks - quite hard Concrete brick - fairly hard, but not as hard as common bricks. Breeze block - fairly soft. Thermalite (foamed concrete) blocks - very soft. B&Q sell anchors which you screw into the last two as normal rawl plugs etc. tend to pull out. The most difficult thing I have tried to drill is a cast in situ concrete lintel in my flat. I don't know what the aggregate was, but we burnt out my spark's professional Bosch hammer drill and only went ~10cm in 10 minutes. Took the wires another way in the end... |
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#14
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In message , R. Mark Clayton
writes "Bill Wright" wrote in message ... Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. If you were to take these complaints at face value you would believe that most British houses were made from bricks that were second only to diamond on the Mohs scale. "You're going to drill right through the wall? You'll have a right job! These bricks are very hard! Very very hard! Hardest bricks there is! Don't ask me why they used such hard bricks!" This belief stems from the use of non-SDS electric drills that have only a ratchet hammer action. Such drills are very inefficient when drilling masonry. It is more comfortable to claim that the bricks are exceptional than to accept that the drill, and by extension yourself, are inadequate. Who wants to go into the house and tell the wife that his tool isn't up to the job? Thus the myth of hard bricks persists. Bill Walls are made of various grades of bricks and their hardness varies: - Engineering bricks - usually purple. Very strong [obviously] and I guess very hard. Facing bricks - usually smooth - more vitrified - very hard. Common bricks - quite hard Concrete brick - fairly hard, but not as hard as common bricks. Breeze block - fairly soft. Thermalite (foamed concrete) blocks - very soft. B&Q sell anchors which you screw into the last two as normal rawl plugs etc. tend to pull out. The most difficult thing I have tried to drill is a cast in situ concrete lintel in my flat. I don't know what the aggregate was, but we burnt out my spark's professional Bosch hammer drill and only went ~10cm in 10 minutes. Took the wires another way in the end... My house was built in 1954. The bricks are incredibly hard, and I've always understood they were engineering bricks. The 'mortar' is often even harder (essentially concrete). Drilling with an ordinary domestic hammer drill is a Herculean task. Masonry nails, cable clips etc are absolutely impossible to hammer in, the only way to use them is first to painstakingly drill a hole, and insert a small Rawlplug. In contrast, the bricks of a recent small extension are incredibly soft. Here, masonry nails etc need Rawlplugs because the brick tends to crumble as you knock them in, and they are not held firmly. The consistency of mortar is not unlike the sand you make seaside sandcastles with - and masonry nails also need careful Rawlpluging. -- Ian |
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#15
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On 29/08/2012 12:31, Ian Jackson wrote:
My house was built in 1954. The bricks are incredibly hard, and I've always understood they were engineering bricks. The 'mortar' is often My previous place of similar vintage also had a fairly hard brick (although a common brick, not an engineering) and render. A normal masonry bit would not touch it. However a Bosch multimaterial bit would do the job in a conventional hammer drill. The SDS had no trouble with it obviously. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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#16
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Martin wrote:
When I were a lad the prefects dropped the bags - around 1957-1958. The school yob was struck down with a very large plastic bag of water, he didn't know what hit him or why he was so wet. Sad to relate, a boy in our 5th form dropped a full crate of school milk out of the window of the four storey block, severely injuring the history master, who was on playground duty. The same boy, a week or two before, destroyed a bunch of daffodils by eating the flowers, thus making himself ill. On one occasion after he and two friends all received a severe caning which made one of the others cry, he remarked, "I found that quite stimulating." He went on to join the RAF, where I believe he did very well. Bill |
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#17
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On 29/08/2012 09:28, Tim Lamb wrote:
In message , Andy Champ writes On 28/08/2012 04:23, Bill Wright wrote: Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. Coincidentally this weekend I was drilling a couple of holes into the wall of my son's place. Unfortunately I hadn't brought my drill with me. Luckily in the bottom of my toolbag was an old rawldrill set my grandfather left me - it seemed to work just fine. (though only two holes!) As a just transferred 11 year old, the height of fun on a winter mornings break was boring holes in the practical centre red brick walls with a copper penny. A year later it was cotton reel tanks! Anyone remember those? regards Memory Lane! -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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#18
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On 29/08/2012 12:31, Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , R. Mark Clayton writes "Bill Wright" wrote in message ... Listen to any DIY man and he will tell you about the extraordinary hardness of the bricks that make up his house. If you were to take these complaints at face value you would believe that most British houses were made from bricks that were second only to diamond on the Mohs scale. "You're going to drill right through the wall? You'll have a right job! These bricks are very hard! Very very hard! Hardest bricks there is! Don't ask me why they used such hard bricks!" This belief stems from the use of non-SDS electric drills that have only a ratchet hammer action. Such drills are very inefficient when drilling masonry. It is more comfortable to claim that the bricks are exceptional than to accept that the drill, and by extension yourself, are inadequate. Who wants to go into the house and tell the wife that his tool isn't up to the job? Thus the myth of hard bricks persists. Bill Walls are made of various grades of bricks and their hardness varies: - Engineering bricks - usually purple. Very strong [obviously] and I guess very hard. Facing bricks - usually smooth - more vitrified - very hard. Common bricks - quite hard Concrete brick - fairly hard, but not as hard as common bricks. Breeze block - fairly soft. Thermalite (foamed concrete) blocks - very soft. B&Q sell anchors which you screw into the last two as normal rawl plugs etc. tend to pull out. The most difficult thing I have tried to drill is a cast in situ concrete lintel in my flat. I don't know what the aggregate was, but we burnt out my spark's professional Bosch hammer drill and only went ~10cm in 10 minutes. Took the wires another way in the end... My house was built in 1954. The bricks are incredibly hard, and I've always understood they were engineering bricks. The 'mortar' is often even harder (essentially concrete). Drilling with an ordinary domestic hammer drill is a Herculean task. Masonry nails, cable clips etc are absolutely impossible to hammer in, the only way to use them is first to painstakingly drill a hole, and insert a small Rawlplug. My current house is exactly like that. Obo nails bend! -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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#19
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Martin wrote:
On 29 Aug 2012 15:02:32 GMT, Huge wrote: On 2012-08-29, Martin wrote: On 29 Aug 2012 13:34:40 GMT, Huge wrote: On 2012-08-29, Ian Jackson wrote: When I were a lad, plastic bags didn't really exist. We had to make do with rubber balloons. Never seen an origami water bomb? http://www.origami-instructions.com/...bomb-base.html A bin liner holds far more water. :-) "When I were a lad, plastic bags didn't really exist." They did in 1957. Aye and if yer got hold of one you treasured it. Our family had a plastic bag. Only a small one mind, but it were ours. It was said that Aunty Grace in Newcastle had one, but I don't know if it were true. Bill |
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#20
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On 29/08/2012 20:26, Bill Wright wrote:
Martin wrote: On 29 Aug 2012 15:02:32 GMT, Huge wrote: On 2012-08-29, Martin wrote: On 29 Aug 2012 13:34:40 GMT, Huge wrote: On 2012-08-29, Ian Jackson wrote: When I were a lad, plastic bags didn't really exist. We had to make do with rubber balloons. Never seen an origami water bomb? http://www.origami-instructions.com/...bomb-base.html A bin liner holds far more water. :-) "When I were a lad, plastic bags didn't really exist." They did in 1957. Aye and if yer got hold of one you treasured it. Our family had a plastic bag. Only a small one mind, but it were ours. Luxury! We used to dream of plastic bag. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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