Lincolnshire Ian Posted Wednesday at 15:50 Posted Wednesday at 15:50 Hi folks I need to replace a cast stone window cill following an accident with a scaffolding plank (see picture). As the wall is rendered I clearly need to do whatever needs doing very carefully. To remove the cill I am planning to protect the surrounding area with plastic sheeting to avoid getting dust on the render. Then use a combination of drill and grinder to remove the damaged unit as carefully as possible. Can anyone think of a way to improve upon my approach? Many thanks
marshian Posted Wednesday at 15:55 Posted Wednesday at 15:55 4 minutes ago, Lincolnshire Ian said: Hi folks I need to replace a cast stone window cill following an accident with a scaffolding plank (see picture). As the wall is rendered I clearly need to do whatever needs doing very carefully. To remove the cill I am planning to protect the surrounding area with plastic sheeting to avoid getting dust on the render. Then use a combination of drill and grinder to remove the damaged unit as carefully as possible. Can anyone think of a way to improve upon my approach? Many thanks Can you not glue the broken piece back on?
Redbeard Posted Wednesday at 16:42 Posted Wednesday at 16:42 38 minutes ago, marshian said: Can you not glue the broken piece back on? My thoughts too, though it depends on how many pieces the 'piece' is in. Many people have a lot of success with epoxy. If you have the piece as a whole piece you could try drilling holes for, say, 3 dowels in the main cill, bed the dowels in epoxy in those holes, and drill corresponding, perhaps slightly oversized, holes in the broken piece, clean and 'butter' the faces with epoxy, then breathe deeply and and press together. If you are lucky the reveal could help wedge it together. Optimist's view: Done! Pessimist's view: (Just refuse to entertain that view!) 1
Mr Punter Posted Wednesday at 16:53 Posted Wednesday at 16:53 Yes, just stick it back on with adhesive from a mastic gun. I would not bother with dowels etc.
Redbeard Posted Wednesday at 17:10 Posted Wednesday at 17:10 15 minutes ago, Mr Punter said: I would not bother with dowels etc. But I am a pessimist! And someone for whom wonder-glues rarely do what they say on the tin/cartridge/tiny tiny little tube...
Russell griffiths Posted Wednesday at 20:43 Posted Wednesday at 20:43 I would look at a multi tool blade that is longer than standard with a tungsten edge to it go under the cill and plunge in for the full depth then cut out the mastic under the window. good luck.
crispy_wafer Posted Wednesday at 20:51 Posted Wednesday at 20:51 Wonder if one of those magicman outfits could effect a repair on something like this. a quick google and this bod has done something with a cast stone corner block https://magicman.co.uk/examples/
Bonner Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago Another vote for glue, two part epoxy and dowel (stainless or brass)
torre Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Another vote for epoxy glue if you have the other piece intact as it'll save loads of effort. I think you may find it hard to align into position as tightly once you've put a dowel in though
markc Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 2 hours ago, Bonner said: Another vote for glue, two part epoxy and dowel (stainless or brass) To expand on the dowel - definitely worth doing but masonry style, not close fitting or you will never get it aligned as mentioned above. Drill a couple of holes in both sides fairly well aligned and use screws or pieces of wall tie as the dowels (loose in holes). Once happy it will push back into place, glue on the faces and in the holes and push it in place. If you must remove the Cill, a carbide reciprocating saw works well 1
Lincolnshire Ian Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago Thanks for the responses everyone. The break wasn't clean, lots of little bits which are dispersed in the scaffold mat. Gluing isn't an option. I have a new piece being delivered on Monday.
marshian Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 52 minutes ago, Lincolnshire Ian said: Thanks for the responses everyone. The break wasn't clean, lots of little bits which are dispersed in the scaffold mat. Gluing isn't an option. I have a new piece being delivered on Monday. Gutted for you - good luck with removal and replacement - hope it goes perfectly
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