Zeke
Well-known member
The fabricator won't drill a hole or 4 in their stone step? What does that tell you? Tells me they don't like the idea to begin with.
OK, so that's said and done. Now back to what rlitman said, use a rotary tool that doesn't beat on the corner as much as a hammer drill and certainly not an SDS. BTW, SDS will drill w/o the hammer. At least mine will. So you could possibly do this with a new carbide bit and water. Water with anything you do to lube and cool the operation. A consideration is to use successively larger bits.
I don't like the Tapcon idea only because they exert outward pressure and it's stone, there could be existing stress cracks, or new from drilling. If you successfully get the holes drilled, be thankful you got that far.
From what I can tell, the left side railing is already fabbed up and ready to install in the same manner as the RH one, i.e., a plate with four holes. I'm going to stand pat on my idea of sinking all thread in epoxy. According to rlitman, the strength of the thickness of the stone is enough. He could (and usually is) right, but if you're drilling holes, you might as well drop the all thread in deeper so you can cinch up nice and tight once the epoxy reaches full strength. I doubt you will be using anything larger than 5/16ths" in a 3/8ths hole.
Just as a reminder, I mentioned using water while drilling. You could use fast set while the hole is still damp. Not so with epoxy, it has to be bone dry (the kind I'm thinking of — A and B mix. Simpson makes a good one in a tube.). There are epoxy modified setting compounds but I'm not all that familiar. For those you need a hole big enough to pour the mixture in.
OK, so that's said and done. Now back to what rlitman said, use a rotary tool that doesn't beat on the corner as much as a hammer drill and certainly not an SDS. BTW, SDS will drill w/o the hammer. At least mine will. So you could possibly do this with a new carbide bit and water. Water with anything you do to lube and cool the operation. A consideration is to use successively larger bits.
I don't like the Tapcon idea only because they exert outward pressure and it's stone, there could be existing stress cracks, or new from drilling. If you successfully get the holes drilled, be thankful you got that far.
From what I can tell, the left side railing is already fabbed up and ready to install in the same manner as the RH one, i.e., a plate with four holes. I'm going to stand pat on my idea of sinking all thread in epoxy. According to rlitman, the strength of the thickness of the stone is enough. He could (and usually is) right, but if you're drilling holes, you might as well drop the all thread in deeper so you can cinch up nice and tight once the epoxy reaches full strength. I doubt you will be using anything larger than 5/16ths" in a 3/8ths hole.
Just as a reminder, I mentioned using water while drilling. You could use fast set while the hole is still damp. Not so with epoxy, it has to be bone dry (the kind I'm thinking of — A and B mix. Simpson makes a good one in a tube.). There are epoxy modified setting compounds but I'm not all that familiar. For those you need a hole big enough to pour the mixture in.
