Are us powertool junkies any quicker than the old boys? | Plumbing Tools | Page 2 | Plumbers Forums

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Discuss Are us powertool junkies any quicker than the old boys? in the Plumbing Tools area at Plumbers Forums

Phil

Plumbers Arms member
Plumber
Messages
4,236
Although not as bad as Billy I myself am a powertool maniac and have to have all my expensive toys around me to do every single job.

I was doing a bathroom for a semi retired joiner who manages quite happily with only the most basic joinery tools and we even joked about the fact that by the time I've got all my toys out he would have opened his toobag and had the job done by the time I've finished unloading my gagets.

I mean I was helping my dad put his new hardwood door on the other week and you couldn't hardly move for kit everywhere...... Fein, router, SDS, impact driver, 10.8 drill driver, combi dril, circular saw, electric plane and god knows what else!
 
you want to try rubble walls with petersmarland brick outers. the bricks alone take around 30 to 50 mins to core safely. Putting the flue in for my own aga years back I hit a wall tie and ended up on the floor bleeding and unconscious as the drill clutch failed to work and it spun round and smacked me in the face. Never thought to sue screwfix, but a friend broke his fingers doing the same with a B&Q core drill, he got a hell of a sum off them several thousand, and BNQ now have disclaimers everywhere in using core drills.
done that smashed my back teeth trough my tongue blood everywhere
 
To be fair on myself I snap off the cut out with grips, I avoid hitting joists for the sake of the ceilings downstairs but I can see how drilling two holes is better for the joist.
 
I was taught to just mark the top of the joists very accurately & cut on the lines dead plumb cuts but not too deep. Then use a wood chisel & hammer vertically to split the bit in the middle (that you have cut on each side) & then it will snap off with a little tap of hammer to the side unless it is a knotty bit which might need the handsaw through it in a lot of cuts.
Then just use a round rasp or a sharp wood saw to round the bottom of the notch out to allow the pipe to be below the bottom of floorboards.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top