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- From: ptrei@bistromath.mitre.org (Peter Trei)
- Subject: Re: Tearing out woodstove and brick hearth
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.142141.22078@linus.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: bistromath.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation
- References: <lm6osoINNj96@boogie.cs.utexas.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 14:21:41 GMT
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <lm6osoINNj96@boogie.cs.utexas.edu> swisher@cs.utexas.edu (Janet M. Swisher) writes:
- >The stove rests on a brick hearth which extends about 4 feet up two
- >walls and out into the room in a square with a rounded corner. The
- >floor part of the hearth was laid on top of the hardwood floor, with a
- >layer of plastic sheeting in between (which I know because it sticks
- >out in a few places). As far as I can tell, the wall part is laid
- >right up against the drywall.
-
- >What is involved in tearing apart brick masonry? Can we do it without
- >damaging the floor terribly much? In spite of the plastic sheet, I'm
- >sure there are places where the mortar got on to the hardwood.
-
- I recently took down a 30 foot brick chimney using handtools - a
- solid steel mason's chisel an inch and a half wide, and a hand sledge
- hammer. It took a couple of days.
-
- It wasn't too difficult. Wear HEAVY leather gloves, strong shoes
- (you *will* drop stuff on your toes), and (very important) eye
- protection. It takes some practice to find the best place and angle to
- hit (at the brick/mortar join, with the chisel pointed slightly into
- the brick to lift it away from the mortar).
-
- You'll break a lot of bricks until you get the hang of it. If you
- don't care, you can use a big sledge to loosen things up a bit before
- you start. As it sounds as if the wall and floor are up against the
- brick in this case, it might not be a good idea.
-
- While I can't be sure, I'd guess the the demolition process
- shouldn't damage the floor much.
-
- (I usually practice speculative, rather than operative, masonry).
-
- Peter Trei
- ptrei@mitre.org
-
-