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Dave_

Alright lads,

Just bought a makita chaser and Hoover. Lovely bit of kit.

I'd love to make my life even easier and get an angle grinder to cut out holes for back boxes...

Does anybody have advice on what grinder to buy? I'd like one that can cut 35mm deep and that is quite light so I can have the Hoover in one hand and the grinder in another. I do love Bosch professional tools and see they do a 125mm diameter grinder but I'm not sure of the cutting depth.

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Dave
 
If you are going to use a grinder for back boxes then just use the chaser, it has better depth control.

A 125mm grinder will manage 35mm deep, but will spread the cut well outside the box area.
 
Whatever you get I would not recommend holding a grinder in one hand if it snatches your next post will be " what's the best drill to buy if I only have 1 hand ?"
 
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Alright lads,

Just bought a makita chaser and Hoover. Lovely bit of kit.

I'd love to make my life even easier and get an angle grinder to cut out holes for back boxes...

Does anybody have advice on what grinder to buy? I'd like one that can cut 35mm deep and that is quite light so I can have the Hoover in one hand and the grinder in another. I do love Bosch professional tools and see they do a 125mm diameter grinder but I'm not sure of the cutting depth.

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Dave
bosch blue, makita, dewalt, metabo or milwaukee.....the rest are turd...
i use makita stuff myself....
dont make the mistake of buying a 230V one because its in a domestic property and so its `allright`...
not so....even a domestic property is counted as a place of work..if you are carrying out install there...so choose a 110V one wont you....
 
Loads of dust with an angle grinder.
 
bosch blue, makita, dewalt, metabo or milwaukee.....the rest are turd...
i use makita stuff myself....
dont make the mistake of buying a 230V one because its in a domestic property and so its `allright`...
not so....even a domestic property is counted as a place of work..if you are carrying out install there...so choose a 110V one wont you....

110v tools?
On a domestic job?
Never!!!
 
110 a requirement? I just bought a 240 drill cos I'm fed up of lugging a tranny around. Id be interested to know of this requirement?

I have loads of Bosch blue kit in 10.8v and 18. I'm considering the 18v Bosch blue. The wall chaser is great for switches but a pig for a double socket that's around 300mm to the top! You cant really see what your cutting. Hard to get that low down when your 6ft!

I agree that using a Hoover with one hand and a grinder with the other is not the safest, I see builders (with five digits on each hand) do it all the time but that justifies nothing....
 
Take it from someone who's had an angle grinder bounce off his nut when relieving tension in his left hand, luckily just the body, not the spinning disc. Never use an angle grinder one handed. There. I think the safety warnings are sorted.
 
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I find it easiest to cut the plaster with a multi tool and finish off with a chisel tip on the sds. That way i dont need to do any repairs around the socket just fill the chase.
 
makes me wonder how houses ever got wired before all these wonderful labour saving electrically powered tools were invented. for example. this is how we used to drill joists.


6818-003-EF325427.jpg
 
David: regardless of wether its a domestic scenario or not is neither here nor there....its still classed as a site...a place of work and as such 110V tools should be used...

There is no requirement to automatically use 110v equipment, the requirement is for the person responsible to carry out a risk assessment and act accordingly.
 
exactly. weigh the risk of electocution against the risk of a hernia dragging a 3kva tranny up several flights of stairs.
 
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