Garden DIY help please
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Garden DIY help please
I need to fix threaded bolts into paving stone (set on a concrete base) to fix down a fountain. I have been advised I need to hire a 'resin kit' but fancied an easier route of setting the rods in concrete. Does anyone have experience of doing this, and if so will a s/steel rod stay rust free in the air and corrosion free in the concrete or should I use nylon rods?
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Hi Boac,
Firstly - could the slab you want to fix to be moved ? If it can - mark out the holes drill through and lift it - place the bolts through the holes so the heads will underneath the slab and reset.
You can buy proprietory anchors - Ramset - is one make, you drill a hole, push in the anchor and set it by knocking its internal wedge down. To use these devices you'll either need the slab to be quite thick or good concrete underneath.
Stainless steel should not rust at all but you may have trouble finding stainless bolts or studding - I wouldn't use Nylon to fix anything on the heavy side.
Hope this helps.
Firstly - could the slab you want to fix to be moved ? If it can - mark out the holes drill through and lift it - place the bolts through the holes so the heads will underneath the slab and reset.
You can buy proprietory anchors - Ramset - is one make, you drill a hole, push in the anchor and set it by knocking its internal wedge down. To use these devices you'll either need the slab to be quite thick or good concrete underneath.
Stainless steel should not rust at all but you may have trouble finding stainless bolts or studding - I wouldn't use Nylon to fix anything on the heavy side.
Hope this helps.
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Thanks, FGF. Immoveable, not thick enough and 'questionable' base, so option 3 looks likely. I've tracked down some 10mm 'underwater' s/s threaded in a ship's chandler. Have you any experience of this resin thing/and do you reckon cronky would work instead?
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There's a Nuclear grade bonding bonding gunge available, Super No-Nails. If your two mating surfaces are roughish, but flat, one tube would mate them for eternity. Job done.
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Any number of places to get Stainless rod, resin and fiittings but Screwfix is a one stop shop.
As you've already sourced the rod locally if you can't find the resin in the local builders merchant I'd substitute a 7 minute polyurethane. If a whole tube is too much to pay for your local woodwork or model shop will sell it in small bottles. "Gorilla" is the most common brand in that smaller size. Longer setting time though.
Caution - the glue expands to fill any available airspace so underglue by 30% and wear gloves - it's a bugger to get off. Any excess can be trimmed or popped off with a chisel while 'green' - solid but not truly set.
Rob
As you've already sourced the rod locally if you can't find the resin in the local builders merchant I'd substitute a 7 minute polyurethane. If a whole tube is too much to pay for your local woodwork or model shop will sell it in small bottles. "Gorilla" is the most common brand in that smaller size. Longer setting time though.
Caution - the glue expands to fill any available airspace so underglue by 30% and wear gloves - it's a bugger to get off. Any excess can be trimmed or popped off with a chisel while 'green' - solid but not truly set.
Rob
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BOAC: Many years ago I saw a tie down anchor being installed in a concrete slab; it was to hold an F101 on ground runs at full A/b.
The ends of the U bolt were held in the concrete with epoxy, but I cannot tell you what sort, never bothered to ask.
The ends of the U bolt were held in the concrete with epoxy, but I cannot tell you what sort, never bothered to ask.
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Sorry girls - Gnomes are for 'Wussies'. If it ain't a reheated Avon I ain't interested.
Anyway- I have the info I need now, so thanks all, and I trust you 2 have 'Gnomes' to go to.
Anyway- I have the info I need now, so thanks all, and I trust you 2 have 'Gnomes' to go to.