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Standard User billford
(elder) Sat 25-May-24 09:59:58
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
Fair enough smile

Must admit, it was some time ago... elfin safety would probably have a fit these days tongue
Standard User DFScale
(regular) Sat 25-May-24 10:03:21
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Taras:
its 25mm flexible corrugated conduit so about 19mm id.. Seen people on youtube use a plastic bag.

A bit of a tease not telling us how long it is.

One thing I would do is get the drawstring in before installing the conduit, with the conduit laid flat.
Standard User billford
(elder) Sat 25-May-24 10:08:21
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
More seriously- you want something light with lots of air drag but that isn't big (or rigid) enough to get stuck. You could probably knock up a sort of parachute with a scrap of cloth and a few bits of (strong) thread and tie that to the end of the string. Should work I think.

Edited by billford (Sat 25-May-24 10:44:14)


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Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Sat 25-May-24 10:19:59
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: DFScale] [link to this post]
 
its about 10 to 15m (stupidly thought it was 50m * original - see the other thread in this section 😂 MHC will laugh at this)

Yeah its going in the loft, over the loft insulation .. so i have to crawl down the length. I have two 10 meter pieces so i have to get a coupler, also I have to unbend the conduit ..........

* the reason i said 50m in another thread, was due to me buying 25m of coax cable(ebay) and it didn't even go around with loads left, which i expected. So I over estimated, given that experience 🙈😂

Edited by Taras (Sat 25-May-24 10:25:38)

Standard User MHC
(sensei) Sat 25-May-24 14:06:00
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
Have you laid teh conduit in place?


If not, use a heavy nut and some light thread. From teh upstairs drop the conduit to teh ground and feed the nut in ... it will go to teh ground level. Pul some conduit up shaking as you go, the nut will continue down. Keep going until it appears.


For in-wall I have some large nuts - 50mm & 80mm A/F but too big for conduit!


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

M H C


taurus excreta cerebrum vincit
Standard User DFScale
(regular) Sat 25-May-24 15:34:02
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
OK, 10 to 15m in 25mm ribbed is going to be a challenge. I would have it back out if necessary and lay it out flat to get a drawstring in. No good doing it in situ. The more you try in situ, the more expensive the lesson that you can't do it!

I would be trying something like this https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/DRCAKL.html and bending the hook a little further to be sure of pulling it back. For the distance you are trying with ribbed conduit, I doubt vacuum will work, so it will have to be air pressure.
Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Sat 25-May-24 15:34:32
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: MHC] [link to this post]
 
Its currently being de-kinked so no its not in place and that will be my plan B 😂
Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Sat 25-May-24 15:53:57
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: DFScale] [link to this post]
 
Gravity fed nut i think should work. I can just sit in the roof and feed the nut into the conduit and keep on pulling the conduit up whilst making sure the string is being thread in, if the Vacuum doesn't work.
Standard User billford
(elder) Sat 25-May-24 16:11:47
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
Ah, didn't realise it hadn't been fitted... provided you can safely find some height, a vertical drop is definitely the best option.
Standard User Ancient_Mariner
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Sat 25-May-24 16:50:24
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Re: conduit and pulling string


[re: billford] [link to this post]
 
To cover all eventualities, best to drop the weight in - with draw string attached - from the high end wink

Two other ideaa: on Ebay search for conduit snake also, I dont know whether the overhead fibre is all athe same - the type used hear was oval with a slight figure-of-8 construction. If you could scrounge a length of that - that should push through. I'm basing that on the offcut that the engineer left me for my "cable collection"

Also, if you have not yet joined/glued your flexible conduit together, then you could do each half seperately, rather than blow/push through the whole length.

My conduit, 25mm uPVC solid was just under 10 metres with four 90 degree bends.
https://ancient-mariner.co.uk/public/2023.08.01%20-%... - now currently using a Technicolor router mounted lower down.

Cheers!

Clive

Andrews & Arnold Home::1 FTTP Technicolor DGA0122 Cisco ATA191 for A&A VoIP together with a HUAWEI E5776 with O2 Data SIM
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