Pull the cable through the conduit

  • Erstellt am 2020-06-01 07:47:35

gmt94

2020-06-01 13:30:52
  • #1
I just measured roughly, it should be close to 10m. I only have those nylon guides from the hardware store, but they are crap. I was able to push another empty conduit with an 18mm inner diameter up to that point. There I want to insert the endoscope and see why it doesn't go further. Afterwards, I will have to see what the best plan is.
 

gmt94

2020-06-03 13:55:22
  • #2
Hello,

The endoscope has arrived and I tried it right away. It doesn't look good around my empty conduit.

At some point during construction, it must have gotten damaged.



There are definitely stones inside and it doesn't look completely round anymore.

There is definitely still space, the only question is how I get past it.
 

seat88

2020-06-03 14:36:51
  • #3
What did you use as empty conduit? Normally, that's hard to break...
 

gmt94

2020-06-03 15:39:36
  • #4


Well, one of those black ribbed ones, I assumed it was made for something like that. The shell builder installed it back then.
The pipe crosses the supply lines for gas and electricity. I just traced the line in the yard. And compared the measurements to see after how many meters the bottleneck occurs. Everything matches up. Presumably, when closing the supply lines, they simply threw mineral material on it. Then my paver came along and compacted it properly. That's probably when the pipe got damaged.



This is what it looks like from the other side.
 

danixf

2020-06-03 21:28:42
  • #5
Too bad about the pipe. Get some lubricant and also move the other cables very slightly. Most likely use the 5x16. The insulation is much more durable than network/coax. It just has to slip through the corner once. With a doorbell wire, I actually don’t see a problem. But that’s where it ends. Your project to implement over the existing network cable and to do without the doorbell wire doesn’t work?
 

gmt94

2020-06-03 21:52:41
  • #6
So hours later. It all kept bothering me, I removed the plaster and once again milled through compacted mineral mixture. As I always have incredible luck in life, the pipe was probably damaged when the thick point foundations for my intermediate roof were made.

So now there is a huge pile of concrete over my broken pipe.

[ATTACH alt="IMG_20200603_204355.jpg" type="full"]47683[/ATTACH]

So for now, we put the doorbell on a network cable. But I want to fix it again. Fiber optic is supposed to be installed at our place. I have a conduit running all the way to the street, which goes over the garage. My plan was that they throw their stuff in there without destroying my entire property again.

You have 1100 sqm of property and concrete and conduit meet down to the millimeter.
 

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