Good idea
Well.... I have a old circular saw long ago designated solely for dusty crud work like cutting stucco with a masonry blade.
But. I'm cutting an arc. If it were made of wood I'd use a jigwaw. The rounded cut would be pretty tough with the circular saw alone. You gave me a great idea though. I'll vacate most of the cut with straight strips with the circular saw. Then I'll use my wet saw without the table and free hand the arc. It just has to be round enough to mortar.
Or I'll do as David suggested and use a diamond wheel on the grinder. Nice to have options.
Not having seen the materials yet, but knowing the sections are only 1' in length, how do they join together? Are they fluted to overlap each other I wonder, or are they straight and I will just mortar them together? If the latter, I suspect they will need additional support, which I can provide as they go through the roof.
You are correct in pointing out the force on the outside of the arch walls. Big cathedrals in Europe like the one in Lincoln England have giant extensions with piles of masonry outside along the walls (not sure of the architectural term) to keep the weight of the roof from pushing the wall outward and over.
I could easily make a little brick wall on either side of the arch tunnel walls. If I placed it on top of the concrete I just poured I'd be pretty confident they will never move. And nobody would ever see them as they will be inside the walls.
Well.... I have a old circular saw long ago designated solely for dusty crud work like cutting stucco with a masonry blade.
But. I'm cutting an arc. If it were made of wood I'd use a jigwaw. The rounded cut would be pretty tough with the circular saw alone. You gave me a great idea though. I'll vacate most of the cut with straight strips with the circular saw. Then I'll use my wet saw without the table and free hand the arc. It just has to be round enough to mortar.
Or I'll do as David suggested and use a diamond wheel on the grinder. Nice to have options.
Not having seen the materials yet, but knowing the sections are only 1' in length, how do they join together? Are they fluted to overlap each other I wonder, or are they straight and I will just mortar them together? If the latter, I suspect they will need additional support, which I can provide as they go through the roof.
You are correct in pointing out the force on the outside of the arch walls. Big cathedrals in Europe like the one in Lincoln England have giant extensions with piles of masonry outside along the walls (not sure of the architectural term) to keep the weight of the roof from pushing the wall outward and over.
I could easily make a little brick wall on either side of the arch tunnel walls. If I placed it on top of the concrete I just poured I'd be pretty confident they will never move. And nobody would ever see them as they will be inside the walls.
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