14,211 views ·
33 replies
14k views
33 replies
Demolish non-load-bearing closet wall
I prefer to be bored rather than one-armed
No, but I'll think a bit about what to do. I'll sleep on it, simple as that.. 
you know emma: I'll give the DJ a tip there..... If you're AFRAID of a machine, it's going to hurt.... If you respect a machine, it's going to go smoothly.....
If you're going for a tiger saw, don't buy the cheapest blades but buy one you can trust... Then just start sawing....
If you're going for a tiger saw, don't buy the cheapest blades but buy one you can trust... Then just start sawing....
Haha, I have a scared respect maybe...
This is a very late response, but as Jan-Å said above, lightweight concrete does not need to be blåbetong. There are plenty of non-blue lightweight concrete options.
In our garden, we found some slabs, maybe five cm thick, that broke when you kneeled on them and leaned forward. We wondered what kind of strange material it was. When we were about to replace the window in the basement storage, we discovered that it wasn't lecablock under the window but the same (horizontal) slabs we found in the garden, i.e., lightweight concrete. We decided to remove them and replace them with lecablock since the rest of the wall was made of leca. It was basically just a matter of putting the crowbar in the joints, prying them off, and lifting them up. Once we removed them, it looked as if there had been a rather low doorway that had been sealed after the wall was completed (there has never been a door on the plan). And then we used a tigersaw to cut a round hole when we finished building with leca. Using a tigersaw is really fun; more people should try it
In our garden, we found some slabs, maybe five cm thick, that broke when you kneeled on them and leaned forward. We wondered what kind of strange material it was. When we were about to replace the window in the basement storage, we discovered that it wasn't lecablock under the window but the same (horizontal) slabs we found in the garden, i.e., lightweight concrete. We decided to remove them and replace them with lecablock since the rest of the wall was made of leca. It was basically just a matter of putting the crowbar in the joints, prying them off, and lifting them up. Once we removed them, it looked as if there had been a rather low doorway that had been sealed after the wall was completed (there has never been a door on the plan). And then we used a tigersaw to cut a round hole when we finished building with leca. Using a tigersaw is really fun; more people should try it
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