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Discuss Wall chase depth in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at Plumbers Forums

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What is the maximum depth you can go when chasing a pipe in to a wall? What does it mean by leaf when talking about cavity walls?

Vertical chases should not be deeper than one-third of the wall thickness or in cavity walls one third of the thickness of the leaf
 
one thickness / brick and not the total depth including the cavity
 
Cavity walls are generally made of 2 leafs. Inner wall and outer wall.
 
Vertical chases should be no deeper than one third of the wall thickness – with standard 100mm bricks and blocks, that going to be 33mm, which is quite deep anyway – that’s not allowing for any plaster coating which could be 10mm so the maximum depth then works out at 36mm from the front face of the plaster.
Horizontal chases should be no deeper than one sixth of the wall thickness - with standard 100mm blocks, that going to be 16mm which is usually quite sufficient – that’s not allowing for any plaster coating.
 
I'm possibly going to be amending some heating pipe work that at the moment is run externally vertically down a wall from upstairs and boxed in. I've never chased a wall before but I'm assuming you just grind the two lines and chisel or sds the middle out? I'm aware of the depths of chases but is there a max width of a chase?
 
Yes and depending on width might need a central one and might be best to hire a chaser and vac if property is lived in

You will be fine for two 15mm pipes

Don't forget to allow for expansion eg insulate pipes etc
 
Yes and depending on width might need a central one and might be best to hire a chaser and vac if property is lived in

You will be fine for two 15mm pipes

Don't forget to allow for expansion eg insulate pipes etc

They're 22mm pipes so including sleeving or insulating I'd need around 48-56mm..

I've just been looking at the Makita chaser.. *grin*
 
They're 22mm pipes so including sleeving or insulating I'd need around 48-56mm..

I've just been looking at the Makita chaser.. *grin*

How thick is the wall and supporting / non supporting ??
 
Going tomorrow to check it out. How do I know if it's a supporting wall? And oh my, just checked out the reviews on the erbauer wall chaser at £100 and sounds pretty good!! Might take a stroll down there this arvo lol
 
Going tomorrow to check it out. How do I know if it's a supporting wall? And oh my, just checked out the reviews on the erbauer wall chaser at £100 and sounds pretty good!! Might take a stroll down there this arvo lol

Any timbers/ timber splices resting on it ?

And yes but need a good vac done it once without a vac and wasn't clean for about a week it's that dusty
 
Any timbers/ timber splices resting on it ?

And yes but need a good vac done it once without a vac and wasn't clean for about a week it's that dusty

Not that I could see, looked like brick to me.

I've got a kartcher dry/wet vac that has a tool attachment.. I was just thinking of filling the bottom with water and attaching that...?
 
Not that I could see, looked like brick to me.

I've got a kartcher dry/wet vac that has a tool attachment.. I was just thinking of filling the bottom with water and attaching that...?

That should be ok but would leave it dry
 
That should be ok but would leave it dry

Think I tried using it dry when I did some regrouting and it just blew the dust even further :/ might just be my vac though but it's a decent vac
 
Think I tried using it dry when I did some regrouting and it just blew the dust even further :/ might just be my vac though but it's a decent vac

You did have the filter in / bag didn't you ?
 
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