Discuss Wall chaser cutting width in the Electrical Tools and Products area at ElectriciansForums.net

With some chasers you can replace the spacers with additional blades to cut a clean chase and avoid running the sds chisel down it. Useful trick rather than just 2 blades
What chasers are they? I've not seen one that does that. I'd expect if you take spacers out and replace them with blades all you would end up with is a lot of fine line cuts that still needs chopped out, and a chaser machine with a much shorter life expectancy as it's getting over worked.

I've a Metabo MFE40 and it has a blade that can cut out the chase, but from what Metabo have said unless it's very soft material then the blade won't last long...at over £100 a blade I'd be looking more than a handful of chases out of it. The blades are a little offset so they cut into the chase rather than like 3 blades together. But looks like it only really suits thermalite or the likes.
 
I have done it with the titan chaser from screw fix. Added 2 blades in to it so 4 in all. Cut into thick plaster/render and soft bath stone behind no problem. Can't Recall what width I had it due to tinkering but was oval conduit going in for some light switch drops. and fit nice and snug afterwards
 
I have done it with the titan chaser from screw fix. Added 2 blades in to it so 4 in all. Cut into thick plaster/render and soft bath stone behind no problem. Can't Recall what width I had it due to tinkering but was oval conduit going in for some light switch drops. and fit nice and snug afterwards
That's not what the tool is designed for, although on soft stone or thermalite etc not likely to be a problem. If you do it a few times on breeze block, red brick or the harder materials the grinder won't last long. Calling it a useful trick is bit like saying use a battery drill to bang in a nail, or use an SDS drill to core out for a fan. It'll all work, but not for very long.
 
That's not what the tool is designed for, although on soft stone or thermalite etc not likely to be a problem. If you do it a few times on breeze block, red brick or the harder materials the grinder won't last long. Calling it a useful trick is bit like saying use a battery drill to bang in a nail, or use an SDS drill to core out for a fan. It'll all work, but not for very long.
Been drilling fan cores with my sds drill for years.....?
 
I have done it with the titan chaser from screw fix. Added 2 blades in to it so 4 in all. Cut into thick plaster/render and soft bath stone behind no problem. Can't Recall what width I had it due to tinkering but was oval conduit going in for some light switch drops. and fit nice and snug afterwards
Must make more dust for the hoover to suck up as well
[automerge]1580384523[/automerge]
I've got a erbaeur one from screwfix, it's never let me down apart from if you have blunted one of the blades unknowingly it will jam as one blade wants to spin and the other doesn't but that's me not realising rather than the tool. Have also used my mates makita one which is better than mine but also quite a bit more money so depends how much you want to spend.

For me blades set for 25mm oval conduit to bang into the groove, works nicely.
 
Milwaukee M18 SDS does 117mm cores, gets warm but still going strong.
I do at least one a week with my dewalt 240v and I use it for chases/boxes with a scrutch attachment still going strong....I’m on me second drill in 10 years and that’s only because some donut managed to weld an attachment into my last one!.....to be fair though the drill is still going just can’t take the sds bit out ?
 
I do at least one a week with my dewalt 240v and I use it for chases/boxes with a scrutch attachment still going strong....I’m on me second drill in 10 years and that’s only because some donut managed to weld an attachment into my last one!.....to be fair though the drill is still going just can’t take the sds bit out ?
replace the sds chuck.
 

Reply to Wall chaser cutting width in the Electrical Tools and Products area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

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
  • Locked
  • Sticky
Beware a little long. I served an electrical apprenticeship a long time ago, then went back to full time education immediately moving away from...
Replies
55
Views
5K
Hi Everybody Has anybody on here any experience of using a Bosch GMS 120 cable detector? The scenario I have is that I am working on a stone built...
Replies
1
Views
2K
Hello i've recently just had a re wire done on a three bed semi house, Ive noticed a few things im not 100 percent on ive spoken to the firm that...
Replies
24
Views
5K
B
I am considering buying a wall chaser and am confused with what is on offer? At the risk of appearing stupid can someone tell me what the point...
Replies
10
Views
4K

Electricians Tools | Electrical Tools and Products

Thanks for visiting ElectriciansForums.net, we hope you find the Electricians Tools you're looking for. It's free to sign up to and post a question yourself to find a tool or tool supplier either local to you, or online. Our community of electricians and electrical engineers will do their best to find the best tool supplier for you.

We also have a Tiling Tools advice from the worlds largest Tiling community. And then the Plumbers Forums with Plumbers Tools Advice.

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
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