Discuss Chasing walls.....weapon of choice. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Obviously you guys do not come accross beach pebble or Marland brick, both very common around here. Both require diamond cutting disks and then grinding disks. Beach pebbles can deflect a drill bit when drilling through a wall causing it to jam,have had to cut a few off and leave them in the wall
 
Obviously you guys do not come accross beach pebble or Marland brick, both very common around here. Both require diamond cutting disks and then grinding disks. Beach pebbles can deflect a drill bit when drilling through a wall causing it to jam,have had to cut a few off and leave them in the wall
Nope, never had to work with cob or bungaroosh either.
I use diamond discs anyway, which cuts through anything I've come across - plaster, brick, block, concrete, water pipes...
 
Either a Labourer or an Apprentice armed with a 110v wall chaser and a piece of galv conduit for a depth check. Obviously walls marked out first so they can't mess it up.

** ideally main builders labourer could be used to do it like on many other sites.

Then sit back put the kettle on read the paper or electrical drawings. I have too many much more important issues to contend with than wall chasing and getting myself dusty and dirty.
 
Maybe council/housing association bashing. In my whole career I’ve never had a customer that’s opted for a trunking rewire apart from 24 flats in Stamford hill which were being done up for a housing association.
Yeah I know mate, just reminiscing back to the old days, should maybe, get up to date, at least with my thinking, kin chasing machines what ever next? :tongue: Funny story about chasing, did a rewire (empty house) with my Lad, and we had to cross a solid floor under the stairs, RFC, bonding and Kitchen Radial, builders never told us they would be boxing the back of the void in, bit of a shock when we came back to 2nd fix to find al our hard work boxe in, a few expletives, but in hindsight we should have probably asked before we crossed the solid floor, a word beginning with T and ending in S
 
Last edited:
Yeah I know mate, just reminiscing back to the old days, should maybe, get up to date, at least with my thinking, kin chasing machines what ever next? :tongue:
SDS drills, multi tools, Sabre saws, circular saws, impact drivers, etc. gone are the days of rawlplug jumpers, manual hand drills and knocking chases out by hand :eek::D
 
The rewires I’ve done lately have all been surfaced ex council and they wanted all chased and flush. Others have been really old installs with one single socket in each room so update with loads of chasing.
A chaser with a good vac alongside pre drawn lines is, in my opinion, a must.
I use oval conduit in my chases and they sink in there beautifully.
I wouldn’t do without one, end of!
I was chasing the other month and looked behind as I could smell something familiar and my ‘old faithful’ 22 year old Henry was breathing his last breath and coughing up blue acrid smoke (I let him carry on until he coughed a little flame!)
RIP Henry (with the larger body)
Thank you for your help with the flea infestation of ‘96 - you will be replaced!
 
Yeah I know mate, just reminiscing back to the old days, should maybe, get up to date, at least with my thinking, kin chasing machines what ever next? :tongue: Funny story about chasing, did a rewire (empty house) with my Lad, and we had to cross a solid floor under the stairs, RFC, bonding and Kitchen Radial, builders never told us they would be boxing the back of the void in, bit of a shock when we came back to 2nd fix to find al our hard work boxe in, a few expletives, but in hindsight we should have probably asked before we crossed the solid floor, a word beginning with T and ending in S
It’s quick Pete and not really dusty at all . Bang a chase down with the machine then gun it out with a channel chisel bit...about 3-4 mins for a long chase.

 
The old method are the best Mate, all this carp with chasing machines could have finished the bloody job before you have got you chasing machine and vacuum cleaner out of its nice new box. What person on their right mind will want all that crap in their living room, when a bit of care and consideration, and a lump hammer and bolster will do the job far better than some costly machine that makes more dust than a hurricane.
I guess not many people agreed with my post then:tongue::tongue::innocent::coldsweat:
 

Is that Vaccum any good ?
I have the next size up Titan 30Ltr job with the outlet on the top. I find that the dust tends to get sucked through the bag a clogs up the filter a bit.

I have to keep brushing the filter, happens on brand new bags too im thinking if taking it back, does yours do this ?
 
Is that Vaccum any good ?
I have the next size up Titan 30Ltr job with the outlet on the top. I find that the dust tends to get sucked through the bag a clogs up the filter a bit.

I have to keep brushing the filter, happens on brand new bags too im thinking if taking it back, does yours do this ?
My one is fine. Use it all the time for chasing.
 
Thanks Lee I'll take it back and exchange it then Ive only had it a few weeks, it has managed a full chase rewire and it sucks ok but its a bit annoying that the dust keeps sucking through the bag.
 

Reply to Chasing walls.....weapon of choice. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

I'm absolutely tired of renting here. I need a drill for driving ground rods and soil is moderately hard one I wanted to know how big/heavy drill...
Replies
14
Views
3K
Hi all, First post here, hope I'm compliant with the rules! I did do a quick search before asking this, but I couldn't quite come up with the...
Replies
3
Views
3K
I seem to be getting more rewires than usual and am considering buying certain tools that aid rewires as they are bloody hard work. At present I...
Replies
36
Views
10K
Have had a Makita BHP458 (non-brushless) hammer drill for years, I love it, it's pretty indestructable and the torque's great, but the chuck's...
Replies
19
Views
3K
Has anyone come across or used any of the replica / fake power tools? I've stumbled across a few on ebay, mainly Makita but also seen Dewalt...
Replies
3
Views
5K

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Electrical Forum

Welcome to the Electrical Forum at ElectriciansForums.net. The friendliest electrical forum online. General electrical questions and answers can be found in the electrical forum.
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock