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Grinding bolts below concrete surface

Hagatronics

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Jun 18, 2016
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248
Location
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
I'm about to expoy a factory floor and there are quite a few old bolts/dynabolts cut flush with the floor. I want to grind them at least 5mm below the surface so I can fill with epoxy putty and finish flat before the surface is epoxy coated.

Do I use a masonry grinding disk or a steel grinding disk ?
 
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Muckin_Slusher

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Apr 1, 2017
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465
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Abitibi
I'm assuming you've already tried smashing them deeper (or are they epoxied in the holes?)

Acetylene torch might be a lot easier, but the concrete may spall a bit (which could be beneficial as you'd have a bigger/rougher hole to fill.
 

ilovevocs

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Jun 26, 2009
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1,966
Location
Toledo, Ohio
I think I would try to drill as much as possible before grinding. Perhaps you could drill all of it out or enough that you could collapse what’s left with a punch.

Did you hit them with a punch and a hammer to try to embed them deep enough?


Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
 

greenghost

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Joined
Sep 27, 2013
Messages
6
Location
61330
How about an air hammer? I trim concrete with one made for muffler work. Have driven anchor bolts up to 3/4" into the concrete. Five pound air hammer for any thing 1 1/2" too 3". Fifty pounder for anything over 3". Have Fun!
 

619DioFan

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Apr 9, 2013
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Location
San Diego , Ca.
carbide burr in a die grinder would allow you to take them down below floor level without causing much damage to the concrete.
 

tncatadjuster

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Jan 3, 2010
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1,987
Location
Memphis, TN
I bid a decommission of a warehouse with 12,000 bolts to grind smooth. We ground smooth with cut off blade then struck with hammer to sink below surface, epoxy patch.
Turned out out to be a great job.
 
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BFBOB

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Sep 20, 2011
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did you slip a decimal point there??
12 THOUSAND of any task would give me heart palpitations!!
 

tncatadjuster

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Memphis, TN
did you slip a decimal point there??
12 THOUSAND of any task would give me heart palpitations!!

It was a 650,000 square foot automated fulfillment center. Everything was bolted to the floor. I was not sure how to bid it, but it worked out great. Four guys two weeks.
 

BFBOB

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Sep 20, 2011
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Let's see - standard work week, that's 320 man-hours, or 19,200 minutes. Less than two minutes per bolt. That's flying!!
 

joe49

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Sep 25, 2009
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1,883
Location
Tonica, Il
If pro installed the holes will be drilled deep enough to lose the hilti bolts with a hammer.
 

Firstram

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May 16, 2017
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1,390
If pro installed the holes will be drilled deep enough to lose the hilti bolts with a hammer.

Joe gets it!

That is the most difficult thing to teach the new kids. You can show them why it matters every morning and have to show them again after you turn back for 5 min.
 
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