Guest viewing is limited

Tile Drills used to oversize a hole can be capped off

UK Tiling Forum; Established 2006

Welcome to the UK Tiling Forum by TilersForums.com, built in 2006 by Tilers, run by Tilers.

View all of the UK tiling forum threads, questions and discussions here.

D

Deleted member 1779

Tile Drills used to oversize a hole to fit service pipes


How to drill a neat hole in a hard or soft tile and cap it off

Whenver you drill a hole in a tile the outcome will be either one of two things for your project

1) The hole is the correct size and the service pipe is a perfect fit.


2) The hole looks oversized. The pipe appears too small. In that case you can cap it off

This is a selection of standard service pipes that you would come across in a project

pipes.jpg


Our drill kit contains 16mm, 30mm and a 40mm service pipe cutter. As well as 6mm and 8mm for the fixtures and the fittings.

In this shot a raditor pipe is fitted to a tile with a 30mm diamond drill.

radiator5.jpg


The hole looks too big. So a cover plate makes the fitting look neat.

radiator1.jpg


If you use the 16mm diamond drill to cut the hole the results are perfect.


radiator3.jpg


Above are 15mm copper pipes have been fitted into the 16mm hole and look really neat. They need not be capped off.


But cover plates conceal the larger gaps when it is not possible to drill such a small hole.


The main reason that it may not be feasible is because the pipe may already have something fitted to it obstructing the way through like a radiator valve. In that case the 30mm is perfect. Also it may be that you want a certain amount of play in the tile hole so the pipe can move into posistion. A cover plate then hides the gap.

radiator7.jpg


For 15mm cover plates there is a generous 45mm of cover to hide the results of the tile drill behind. So the 30mm diamond drill is a perfect choice. Also we do a 40mm tile drill and yes you can fit that inside the footprint of the cover plate but you get very little clearance at 5mm on the edge. Best to stick with a 30mm.

EXAMPLES

radiator10.jpg


This is a radiator fitted with perfect holes at 16mm so that the pipes are flush with the wall.

radiator9.jpg


Here you see a closeup of the pipes and you can see the 16mm hole is flawless.

radiator8.jpg


In this shot we show you what the pipes would look like if they were fitted with cover plates. You may prefer this look or it may be that the holes require you to fit them. In either case its nice to know that there are solutions.

radiator2.jpg


In this shot the common pipe sizes are laid out as 15mm. 22mm and 32mm next to our drill plate which is 16mm, 30mm and 40mm. The BFKMX covers these service pipes very well.

The contents serve two functions. The smaller drills are for fixtures and fittings. The larger drills are for service pipes.


BFKMX1.jpg


 
Tile drills for radiator pipes with our kit - By Richard Hazell of 365-Drills

1) Drill a 40mm hole into the tile.

tiledrill_1.jpg


2) Slip radiator pipe WITH the valve over the hole

tiledrill_2.jpg


3) Seat tile down onto grout and press in place

tiledrill_3.jpg


4) The Hole at 40mm looks too big for the pipe.

tiledrill_6.jpg


Slip a pipe cover over to cap off for a perfect result



Main Website for tile drills

 
If you need to drill an oversize hole because of some additional fitting which can not be removed, how do you get the nice neat cover plate on?:whatchutalkingabout
 
You can also get them hinged on the inside with snap clips:thumbsup:

Another thing I used to do with the actual copper pipe was to use snap on pipe covers they look much neater than bare copper pipe:thumbsup:

Kev
 
Thats a 15mm cap below.

tiledrill_7.jpg

As Dave says

Its got an interlock clip inside to snap it shut.

Screwfix do the kit for £6.99 per radiator with the chrome pipe sleeves as mentioned by Kev SEE SCREWFIX SITE
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I used to buy them in bags of 10 chrome and white they were cheaper than the kits from screwfix. I used to charge £20 a Rad:thumbsup:

Kev
 
If you do drill holes stick with the 1x40mm from the BFKMX.

Heres why:

We performed a little test ourselves to MINIMISE the hole (and therefore the amount of tile we needed to remove) but found cutting two smaller holes at 30mm made very little difference.

Results:

tiledrill_9.jpg


To the left you can see we removed enough tile to slip the valve through. 2 x 30mm holes were cut so that the hole was an elliptical shape.

On the right you can see the amount of tile saved (shaded in black) when a 40mm crown was placed on top.

As you can tell from that shaded black area the decrease in hole size is so insignificant as to make that particular technique overcomplicated.

Our advice for boring a hole with the simple purpose of bringing through a standard radiator valve on a floor tile is to stick with size 40mm and cap-off with a 45mm cover plate.

The additional benefit is that if the cover plate is lost or broken later then at least the workmanship is neat and tidy with a single hole.
 
How Posh...

es⋅cutch⋅eon

 /ɪˈskʌtʃ
thinsp.png
ən/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [i-skuhch-uh
thinsp.png
n] Show IPA –noun 1. a shield or shieldlike surface on which a coat of arms is depicted. 2. an ornamental or protective plate around a keyhole, door handle, drawer pull, light switch, etc. 3. Nautical. a panel on the stern of a vessel bearing its name and port of registry.
—Idiom 4. blot on one's escutcheon, a stain on one's reputation; disgrace.
Origin:
1470–80; < ONF escuchon ≪ L scūtum shield
thinsp.png


Related forms:
es⋅cutch⋅eoned, adjective
 

Advertisement

Thread Information

Title
Tile Drills used to oversize a hole can be capped off
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Tiling Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
14

Advertisement

Tilers Forums Official Sponsors

UK Tiling Forum; UK

Thread statistics

Created
Deleted member 1779,
Last reply from
Deleted member 1779,
Replies
14
Views
8,251

Thread statistics

Created
Deleted member 1779,
Last reply from
Deleted member 1779,
Replies
14
Views
8,251
Back