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conways had bedford vans with sliding doors if you had to brake hard they would take your arm offWas it Hawkins Quarry tiles that were made as a pair? So when they arrived you had to split the apart with a big flat screwdriver...those were piggin sharp:furious3:
The days when a mixer was either powered by diesel and used to mix sand and cement screed or a mixer was a piece of steel conduit used to mix CTF with .
The days when Hard hats were best used to carry nails across site.
The days when you had to go to the timber yard to get 20p bags of sawdust.
The days when all floors were level........cos you had to screed them.
The days when you piled into the back of a J4 Commer van and fought over a bucket to sit on for the journey home.
Yes happy days![]()
And you had it good.:lol:tilers don't know there born these days
when i started i had to get up 2 hours before i went to bed work a 29 hour day on my knees being whipped by the Foreman every 10 minutes
i,d stagger back to the cardboard box which was home to the 25 of us have a lick of my dads razor strop for my tea then sleep on the cold cobbles with a crisp bag as a blanket for 5 minute before another day work
and i had to pay the boss 1/6 a week for the privilege
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee but we were appy
shaws twin tiles ??Did you boys ever use rope for spacing those fat old frost proof tiles for shop fronts and columns?
pancake Tuesday
the day all the apprentices were initiated (if they could find you )
i had my bolloxs blackened with plumbers black (its a kind of lead paint ) and hung upside down from the tower crane 60 ft up at duttons brewery blackburn
the up side was we could all go home at 12
When I started work, To make a hole in a brickwall to fix somethink cannot remember what it was called, Had to hammer this "thing" turn it as you hammered to make a hole then wall plug. That was hard work, Next to no drills and certainly no cordless. That was back in 1971
When I started work, To make a hole in a brickwall to fix somethink cannot remember what it was called, Had to hammer this "thing" turn it as you hammered to make a hole then wall plug. That was hard work, Next to no drills and certainly no cordless. That was back in 1971
When I used to work with my Grand-Dad he used one as well, I think it was called a "Plugging Chisel"
That is a Rawl Drill, still have one in my toolbox. It is never used for masonry drilling but has 1001 other uses.
No, not a plugging chisel. This thing has a point and 3 cutting edges (crap description)
Cannot find a picture of it, might have to get my camera out tomorrow.
The plugging chisel predated the rawldrill.
The plugging chisel was used to make a larger hole that was plugged with a tapered piece of wood.
https://www.tilersforums.com/attachments/rawlplugs_get_a_grip_history_of_rawlplug-pdf.136934/
The Rawldrill is pictured at the end of the article.