R rqx said:
Would it be better to take up an entire cassette than to make a hole in one, how does that make sense?
If you take up an entire cassette, you replace it with something that has a smaller hole in it but is designed to still hold. If you make a hole in a cassette, you risk it collapsing. However, I don't think the idea of taking up an entire cassette is very realistic.
 
J justusandersson said:
If you remove a whole cassette, you replace it with something that has a smaller hole in it but is designed to still be supportive. If you make a hole in a cassette, you risk it collapsing. However, I don't think the idea of removing a whole cassette is particularly realistic.
No, it's not realistic but I wanted to know so I understood. There should be ways to make holes afterward in prefabricated elements, reinforce the hole or something one would think.
 
R rqx said:
There should be ways to make holes afterward in prefabricated elements, reinforce the hole or something one would think
Then you have to manufacture a new element, with reinforcement that takes the hole into account, otherwise, it won't hold.
 
I live in a house on erge-bjälklag built in 1967!
The entrance to the crawlspace is through the foundation wall in the garage where the boiler room is also located!
If you have any garage or storage, take it that way.

If the crawlspace is damp, it's guaranteed to smell like an arsle until you get it sorted out, which can take time.
 
Hi, the garage is on a slab connected to the house, so I have to go down into the slab first. It will be a heck of a big and deep hole to make.

I don't think the crawl space is so damp right now, but the sill plates had a moisture content of 18%, so I want to prevent this.
 
R rqx said:
Hello, the garage is on a slab connected to the house, so I have to go down into the slab first. It will be one heck of a big and deep hole to make.

I don't think the crawlspace is very damp right now, but the sills had a moisture content of 18%, so I want to prevent this.
That's what the hatch to my crawlspace looks like!
I've carried out surely two tons of construction debris with mold and fungi.... So I'm glad the entrance isn't in the living house.
Entrance to the crawl space with plumbing pipes and materials on the floor; ceiling light illuminates the area.
 
Ah! Looks good, but I guess it's easier to make a hole in a slab on the ground than in an erge floor then? I could do it in the garage then maybe.
 
The easiest way is probably to make a hole from the outside? If you're going to make a hole from the garage, you first have to break away a slab that's at least 60x60cm and then get through the foundation wall. If there's underfloor heating in the garage, it will be difficult...
 
Drilling a hole in a ground slab is straightforward compared to drilling in an ergebjälklag, unless there is underfloor heating, of course.
 
It's probably easiest from the outside but we have a small garden so we would probably prefer in the garage but of course, we need to think about it. There is no underfloor heating. What should be considered when drilling in the slab? Nothing? And in the crawl space, is it just to make a hole anywhere?
 
Make a small well/cassoon on the outside and make a hole in the wall. Ensure it's done so no water flows in. Contact the floor slab supplier/designer. Forget about making a hole in the garage's concrete slab and then in the edge beam (which is thick/high) and thereafter in the foundation wall. Moreover, a crawl space foundation SHALL be accessible!
 
Please explain why I will hit a kantbalk if I go down through the garage slab, but if I go from the outside it is no longer an issue?
 
Why is it a problem from the outside? You can surely conceal the opening with various clever garden decorations.
 
This is how my descent is built!
Concrete basement construction entrance with wire and dark tarp on the floor. Concrete basement entry with visible water heater and exposed pipes.
 
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