ᐅ Core drilling inside the house – does it create a lot of dust indoors?

Created on: 12 Apr 2017 10:52
S
Steffi33
Hello, we still need to carry out a core drilling through a 36cm (14 inches) wall made of KLB blocks. The diameter is 150mm (6 inches). However, the interior walls have already been painted. My question is: does the drilling create a lot of dust?

Best regards, Steffi.
S
Steffi33
12 Apr 2017 12:36
@Knallkörper.. Thanks.. my day is made 🙂
11ant12 Apr 2017 15:05
Knallkörper schrieb:
KLB is something like Ytong, right?

KlimaLeichtBlock is a pumice concrete block.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
Nafetsm14 Apr 2017 10:06
We have a similar situation. We need to drill through concrete from the inside to the outside. Nothing with a large diameter. A LAN cable without a connector needs to pass through. The area has already been painted, and there is a window and a chimney nearby. The contractor plans to drill using a Hilti. Same question: is this feasible, or will everything be ruined afterwards?
K
Knallkörper
14 Apr 2017 12:36
I just did this yesterday—drilling a 10mm (0.4 inch) hole through reinforced concrete with a hammer drill. It definitely creates more visible dust than drilling a hole for kitchen cabinets in porous clay blocks. I held a vacuum cleaner underneath and ended up with a grey stain on the wallpaper, but it was washable.

As long as no water is involved, it’s all manageable.

Edit: Larger diameters than 10mm (0.4 inch) in reinforced concrete are almost always drilled wet with a core drill, but for your Cat cable, 8mm (0.3 inch) is probably sufficient?
77.willo14 Apr 2017 13:26
What kind of reinforced concrete is this? I can only drill up to 2cm (0.8 inches) deep into our ceiling with a hammer drill.
andimann14 Apr 2017 13:44
Hello,
77.willo schrieb:
I can only drill about 2cm (1 inch) deep into our ceiling with a hammer drill.

Get yourself some proper drill bits... Seriously, using a regular hammer drill on concrete is tough, but it’s doable with _good_ drill bits. Even better is the combination of a rotary hammer plus quality drill bits. That makes working with concrete actually enjoyable!

Happy Easter!

Best regards,

Andreas