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Hi all! Be gentle as this is my first post on here.
I am looking to buy a wall chaser but the cutting width is only 30mm max. The 25mm PVC channel I am fitting is 50mm wide, so why is this and whats the solution?
Why manufacture a 30mm cutter when the common channel is 50mm wide.
A keen but inexperienced diyer and curious.
Thanks in advance
 
Last edited:
A good question! Chases are never 30mm, even the 40mm wall chasers would be too narrow. I've just measured some pvc trunking and it's 46mm and that's the small trunking, the larger stuff is 55mm.
 
When I was doing domestic work we had a makita wall chaser which we left set at 24mm width for all chases.
A 25mm oval conduit could be pressed into it with the aid of a bit of batten and a hammer.

It sounds like you are trying to fit plastic capping into a chase which is just plain daft, plastic capping is for first fixing new, unplastered, walls. Use conduit, usually oval, on existing walls which have already been plastered.
 
Why would you put trunking in a chase?
You perhaps guessed that I'd mistakenly written trunking for capping, but thankyou for pointing it out as I hadn't realised. It was late, and even as I was writing it my brain was saying 'something's not right', but I just didn't listen to it enough.
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When I was doing domestic work we had a makita wall chaser which we left set at 24mm width for all chases.
A 25mm oval conduit could be pressed into it with the aid of a bit of batten and a hammer.

It sounds like you are trying to fit plastic capping into a chase which is just plain daft, plastic capping is for first fixing new, unplastered, walls. Use conduit, usually oval, on existing walls which have already been plastered.
Could you expand a little on this please Dave? I have always used plastic capping in chases. What is the difference between a new wall and an existing wall? I realise one is already plastered, but the plasterer is still going to have to use his trowel to fill the chase the same in both cases.
 
You perhaps guessed that I'd mistakenly written trunking for capping, but thankyou for pointing it out as I hadn't realised. It was late, and even as I was writing it my brain was saying 'something's not right', but I just didn't listen to it enough.
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Could you expand a little on this please Dave? I have always used plastic capping in chases. What is the difference between a new wall and an existing wall? I realise one is already plastered, but the plasterer is still going to have to use his trowel to fill the chase the same in both cases.
Chases need to be a lot wider for capping so in a rewire you’d chase out and put oval trunking in 16mm or 25 mm ish so nice straight thin chase less mess....in a new build you’d use capping, I suspect we all do the same thing but the confusion is that some people call capping trunking and vice verse but end of the day whatever works it’s all good ?
 
Chases need to be a lot wider for capping so in a rewire you’d chase out and put oval trunking in 16mm or 25 mm ish so nice straight thin chase less mess....in a new build you’d use capping, I suspect we all do the same thing but the confusion is that some people call capping trunking and vice verse but end of the day whatever works it’s all good ?
Thanks Baddegg.
Do you find you have to chase out a little deeper if using oval conduit compared to capping?
 
Thanks Baddegg.
Do you find you have to chase out a little deeper if using oval conduit compared to capping?
I set my depth to 30mm and once I've ran the sds max down it once its usually perfect depth and width when I use the 22mm oval and just pushes in snugly by hand, no need for the dreaded obos and losing finger nails like when I was an apprentice and using an electric 300mm saw lmao
 

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