Why not use plaster, or a gypsum based filler, to hold it into the chase? No reaction worries then.What happens if it reacts with the plaster and causes cracking at a later stage because the conduit has moved or become loose ?
Maybe it's just me, but in my experience, that's easier said than done - at least in my hands, the cable has an 'orrible tendency to 'jump out' through blobs of plaster or filler.Why not use plaster, or a gypsum based filler, to hold it into the chase? No reaction worries then.
The OP is fixing conduit.Maybe it's just me, but in my experience, that's easier said than done - at least in my hands, the cable has an 'orrible tendency to 'jump out' through blobs of plaster or filler.
I realise that, and I haven't tried it, but I would have suspected that a similar problem might arise with conduit to what I have experienced trying to hold cable in place with blobs of plaster/filler. Given the greater rigidity of conduit, it might work better, but I feel that there still might be problems.The OP is fixing conduit.
Indeed. In the case of 'stubborn' cables (and I guess I would do the same with conduit), as a last resort I've been known to temporarily attach a few bits of wood across the chase, with some sort of padding underneath.It is more a case of making sure that the conduit is firmly bedded into something, so that everything is solid when filling the chase and making good. I usually use a form of mechanical fixing to hold the conduit into the chase, in the form of leaving a few "nibs" at the sides of the chase that make the conduit a tight fit there.
If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.
Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.
Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local