ROUTING ELECTRICAL CABLES

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I WISH TO RUN CABLE VERTICALLY IN A PLASTERED CONCRETE WALL. PLASTER THICKNESS IS NOT SUFFICIENT TO ACCEPT CABLE WITHOUT IT PROTRUDING.

CAN I USE AN ANGLE GRINDER TO CUT A CHANNEL IN THE CONCRETE?

MANY THANKS

JAN
 
stop SHOUTING

And yes you can channel the concrete, as long as its not more than a quarter of the brick / concrete thickness if i remember rightly.
 
Be prepaired for a divorce too, if you use a grinder on concrete it creates a bit of a mess too!! (OK, a bit of a mess is probably putting it a bit lightly)
 
I was going to suggest a hosepipe to dampen the dust, but this would probably have the same end result . . . divorce. :lol:
 
Crafty said:
I was going to suggest a hosepipe to dampen the dust, but this would probably have the same end result . . . divorce. :lol:

Hose down the missus if she gets hot-headed... :wink:
 
Sorry to piggy back off of someone else :oops: but it is an appropriate place to ask what about back boxes ?

The average brick is 10cm thick and even the shallow back boxes are 25mm, so a 35mm back box or a 47mm cooker box will easily be more than a quarter of a brick thick.

Once again sorry for the piggy back but I would be interested to know.

thanks
 
Mascard said:
Sorry to piggy back off of someone else :oops: but it is an appropriate place to ask what about back boxes ?

The average brick is 10cm thick and even the shallow back boxes are 25mm, so a 35mm back box or a 47mm cooker box will easily be more than a quarter of a brick thick.

Once again sorry for the piggy back but I would be interested to know.

thanks

Yes, but you'll probably have at least 12mm of plasterwork on that brick so you're only sinking the box 23mm into the brick.
 
The regulation refers to cable chases, not to cutouts for back boxes.

The cut out for a back box is not very wide or high, so will not significantly weaken a wall even if it is 50% of the depth - after all, you can take a full brick out of a wall for an air vent with no problem.

A chase for a cable, on the other hand, will run for a significant portion of the height or width of the wall, and cutting it too deep will weaken the structure.
 

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