DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/140549-rebating-hole-my-decking-fit-lights.html)

[email protected] January 16th 06 05:01 PM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
Hi

Is there such a thing as an 'adjustable circular rebate and hole cutter
tool' that I can use to fit my new deck lights? If not, how should I
go about this (see below) as I have searched high and low for the
correct tools.

In the deck, I need a 74mm hole cutting straight through the deck board
and a 90mm hole rebating in to the top of the deck board and this
should be 12mm deep.

The light also has a 'lip' on it that sits above the deck (making the
diameter of the fitting above the deck equal to 100mm).

Hope this makes sense....

Cheers

James


louie January 16th 06 05:14 PM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
A hole cutter = hole saw. 74mm = 2.91" so a 3" hole saw would probably
do the trick.

http://www.coastaltool.com/cgi-bin/S...e+113744242 6

and I think you mean rabbet. 90mm = 3.54", 12mm = 0.47"
For this, I would use a router with a circular template.


Jeff Wisnia January 16th 06 05:25 PM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
wrote:
Hi

Is there such a thing as an 'adjustable circular rebate and hole cutter
tool' that I can use to fit my new deck lights? If not, how should I
go about this (see below) as I have searched high and low for the
correct tools.

In the deck, I need a 74mm hole cutting straight through the deck board
and a 90mm hole rebating in to the top of the deck board and this
should be 12mm deep.


I'm afraid I haven't heard the term "rebating" applied to a project like
like you're describing, but Webster's gives this daffynition:

to reduce the sharpness of : BLUNT

So, I'm guessing maybe you're describing either a 90 mm counterbore in a
74 mm hole or a beveled edge on the inside diameter of that 74 mm hole.

Either way, if I had to do it with what I have on hand I'd grab my
router, make up a couple of circular templates out of thin plywood or
Masonite with a sabre saw and route that hole and it's counterbore (or
bevel.)

It's possible you could use a single point circle cutter like this:

http://tinyurl.com/9egoc

In a hand brace if you sharpened the bit to the correct shape and the
the counterbore/chamfer first, then reset the tool smaller to make the
through bore.

Don't even think about using one of those tools in a hand held power
drill, it'd likely leap out and mar your decking. You might be able to
use one of those under power if you took a small drill press, removed
the table and flipped the base around and somehow fastened it to the
deck maybe with some machine screws through the spaces between the deck
boards and a piece of strapping underneath, but that's a long walk for a
short slide.

HTH,

Jeff

snipped

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented."

RicodJour January 16th 06 05:40 PM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
wrote:
Hi

Is there such a thing as an 'adjustable circular rebate and hole cutter
tool' that I can use to fit my new deck lights? If not, how should I
go about this (see below) as I have searched high and low for the
correct tools.

In the deck, I need a 74mm hole cutting straight through the deck board
and a 90mm hole rebating in to the top of the deck board and this
should be 12mm deep.

The light also has a 'lip' on it that sits above the deck (making the
diameter of the fitting above the deck equal to 100mm).

Hope this makes sense....


Yep. Easily done, too.

You need to buy two hole saws of the correct sizes (not sure how
common those sizes are in your neck of the woods as I'm not Metric)
with the appropriate mandrel. Drill a pilot hole where you want the
light to be centered. Use the larger hole saw first, and cut to the
12mm depth necessary for the rebate (in the US, the term is rabbeted).
Then take the smaller hole saw and cut the hole right through the deck
board. use a sharp chisel to clean out the rebated area between the
two hole saw holes and flatten the bottom so the light sits flush with
the deck surface. Done.

R


Goedjn January 16th 06 07:54 PM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
On Mon, 16 Jan 2006 12:25:56 -0500, Jeff Wisnia
wrote:

wrote:
Hi

Is there such a thing as an 'adjustable circular rebate and hole cutter
tool' that I can use to fit my new deck lights? If not, how should I
go about this (see below) as I have searched high and low for the
correct tools.

In the deck, I need a 74mm hole cutting straight through the deck board
and a 90mm hole rebating in to the top of the deck board and this
should be 12mm deep.


I'm afraid I haven't heard the term "rebating" applied to a project like
like you're describing, but Webster's gives this daffynition:

to reduce the sharpness of : BLUNT

So, I'm guessing maybe you're describing either a 90 mm counterbore in a
74 mm hole or a beveled edge on the inside diameter of that 74 mm hole.

Either way, if I had to do it with what I have on hand I'd grab my
router, make up a couple of circular templates out of thin plywood or
Masonite with a sabre saw and route that hole and it's counterbore (or
bevel.)

It's possible you could use a single point circle cutter like this:

http://tinyurl.com/9egoc

In a hand brace if you sharpened the bit to the correct shape and the
the counterbore/chamfer first, then reset the tool smaller to make the
through bore.

Don't even think about using one of those tools in a hand held power
drill, it'd likely leap out and mar your decking. You might be able to
use one of those under power if you took a small drill press, removed
the table and flipped the base around and somehow fastened it to the
deck maybe with some machine screws through the spaces between the deck
boards and a piece of strapping underneath, but that's a long walk for a
short slide.

HTH,

Jeff

snipped



[email protected] January 18th 06 10:23 AM

Rebating a hole in my decking to fit lights
 
Thanks for all your advise everyone.....I'll let you know how I get on.
Cheers



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:27 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter