dh wrote:The way they are running, if i leave a large tail out of the hole where they enter the celing, the wall will not be able to lay flat on the floor for gluing. I was going to coil up some extra in the larger switch opening and pull them out the top after wall is glued.
bobhenry wrote:dh wrote:The way they are running, if i leave a large tail out of the hole where they enter the celing, the wall will not be able to lay flat on the floor for gluing. I was going to coil up some extra in the larger switch opening and pull them out the top after wall is glued.
Just a thought .....
If you lay down new sheets of blue foam it will allow equal pressure on all areas and yet compress where there is a point load. When you pick up your wall there will be an imprint of the wires in the foam but the veneer side will have had the exact same pressure all over. It will also protect from small rocks and variations in the concrete. You can use the foam later in the roof so it will not be a waste.
Shadow Catcher wrote:Oil/petroleum will attack rubber and some plastics. Silicone such as Armorall will not. You can also use dry lubes, heck I have even used dry antiperspirant
Shadow Catcher wrote:dh
This was the spray on antiperspirant, leaves a white powder and it will not attack rubber. Talcum powder will also work, as will penetrant developer. I was having a very difficult time telling where an oil leak was coming from and picked up a can of developer from a welding supply place, it is basically talc in a can and used with visible and fluorescent dye penetrant testing.
wannabefree wrote:Why not use the stuff electricians use. It goes by various nicknames - slickum and gorilla snot is what I know it by. Get it at any big box in the electrical department. Comes in quart squeeze bottles and 5 gallon buckets. My guess is a quart will do
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