Outside my kitchen door there's a concrete pathway which is badly pitted and discoloured with moss. The area in question is about 1m wide by 5m long, and in the Spring I intend to break it up and replace it with concrete flagstones. The gully for the kitchen waste is at the far end of the area to be broken up, and I noticed yesterday that the inside surface of the gully outlet is cracked so I intend to install a new, plastic gully before laying the flags.
The old concrete is about four inches thick and laying on sand, and I'm going to have a shot at breaking it up with a sledgehammer before I go to the expense of hiring jackhammer.
Question is this: at the end where the gully is, how great is the risk that vibration from breaking up the concrete will damage the glazed drain pipe? Would it be wise to stop short with the sledgehammer when I get to that area and use a bolster and hammer instead?
OK if the pipe DOES break it should be easy enough to expose and replace it with plastic, but I'd rather avoid that if possible. Ta muchly.
The old concrete is about four inches thick and laying on sand, and I'm going to have a shot at breaking it up with a sledgehammer before I go to the expense of hiring jackhammer.
Question is this: at the end where the gully is, how great is the risk that vibration from breaking up the concrete will damage the glazed drain pipe? Would it be wise to stop short with the sledgehammer when I get to that area and use a bolster and hammer instead?
OK if the pipe DOES break it should be easy enough to expose and replace it with plastic, but I'd rather avoid that if possible. Ta muchly.