Passing wire down through Exterior Wall












2














Replacing some old wiring with crumbling insulation. One of the wires passes down through an exterior wall from the attic, to an outlet on the second floor, and continues down to the first floor.



I attempted to follow the same path, but I drilled over 6 inches into the bottom of the wall and still haven't broken through.



The drill seems to be really struggling through the wood. Started with a 3/4 auger bit on an 18" extension. That stopped making any more progress so I switched to a 5/8" spade bit on the extension instead. Now the spade bit is fully into the hole along with part of the extension.



Not sure if I should keep going. The old wire goes through, but is there a chance I'm going to cause problems if I keep drilling? The house was built in 1930, so I assume the drilling difficulty is due to the wood used. I'm just worried about weakening the beam or something.



Looking down exterior wall between first and second floor










share|improve this question
























  • Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago










  • You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
    – Kris
    4 hours ago












  • Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
    – HazardousGlitch
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago
















2














Replacing some old wiring with crumbling insulation. One of the wires passes down through an exterior wall from the attic, to an outlet on the second floor, and continues down to the first floor.



I attempted to follow the same path, but I drilled over 6 inches into the bottom of the wall and still haven't broken through.



The drill seems to be really struggling through the wood. Started with a 3/4 auger bit on an 18" extension. That stopped making any more progress so I switched to a 5/8" spade bit on the extension instead. Now the spade bit is fully into the hole along with part of the extension.



Not sure if I should keep going. The old wire goes through, but is there a chance I'm going to cause problems if I keep drilling? The house was built in 1930, so I assume the drilling difficulty is due to the wood used. I'm just worried about weakening the beam or something.



Looking down exterior wall between first and second floor










share|improve this question
























  • Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago










  • You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
    – Kris
    4 hours ago












  • Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
    – HazardousGlitch
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago














2












2








2







Replacing some old wiring with crumbling insulation. One of the wires passes down through an exterior wall from the attic, to an outlet on the second floor, and continues down to the first floor.



I attempted to follow the same path, but I drilled over 6 inches into the bottom of the wall and still haven't broken through.



The drill seems to be really struggling through the wood. Started with a 3/4 auger bit on an 18" extension. That stopped making any more progress so I switched to a 5/8" spade bit on the extension instead. Now the spade bit is fully into the hole along with part of the extension.



Not sure if I should keep going. The old wire goes through, but is there a chance I'm going to cause problems if I keep drilling? The house was built in 1930, so I assume the drilling difficulty is due to the wood used. I'm just worried about weakening the beam or something.



Looking down exterior wall between first and second floor










share|improve this question















Replacing some old wiring with crumbling insulation. One of the wires passes down through an exterior wall from the attic, to an outlet on the second floor, and continues down to the first floor.



I attempted to follow the same path, but I drilled over 6 inches into the bottom of the wall and still haven't broken through.



The drill seems to be really struggling through the wood. Started with a 3/4 auger bit on an 18" extension. That stopped making any more progress so I switched to a 5/8" spade bit on the extension instead. Now the spade bit is fully into the hole along with part of the extension.



Not sure if I should keep going. The old wire goes through, but is there a chance I'm going to cause problems if I keep drilling? The house was built in 1930, so I assume the drilling difficulty is due to the wood used. I'm just worried about weakening the beam or something.



Looking down exterior wall between first and second floor







wiring old-house






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago

























asked 5 hours ago









TypeKG

564




564












  • Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago










  • You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
    – Kris
    4 hours ago












  • Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
    – HazardousGlitch
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago


















  • Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago










  • You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
    – Kris
    4 hours ago












  • Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
    – HazardousGlitch
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
    – IronEagle
    4 hours ago
















Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
– IronEagle
4 hours ago




Pictures might help us understand what you are dealing with..
– IronEagle
4 hours ago












You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
– Kris
4 hours ago






You are drilling directly into a stud perhaps? Although drilling through bottom plate flooring lower level top plate and wall framing is going to be at least 6 inches
– Kris
4 hours ago














Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
– HazardousGlitch
4 hours ago




Since it's on the exterior wall, you could be going into the wood that goes along the outside wall between floors around the whole house(I forget what it's called). Try drilling the same distance from the drywall as the original hole.
– HazardousGlitch
4 hours ago




1




1




Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
– IronEagle
4 hours ago




Either what Kris said (try another hole a good distance away), or you could just be dealing with platform framing, a method fairly common in the 1930's. There could easily be a giant beam running between the floors on the exterior walls. Is it possible to remove the old wiring and see how thick the hole is that it goes through?
– IronEagle
4 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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3














HazardousGlitch had a good suggestion. I don't think I was drilling into to top of a stud because I had tried several holes before posting.



Opened up the wall more so I could position the drill closer to the drywall and went through easily. Above I posted the wrong photo that didn't have the deep hole. Now you can see the deep hole (left bottom) and the successful hole (right by the old wire). You can also see my other failed attempts.



Thanks for the help!



Successfully drilled througb






share|improve this answer





















  • Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
    – HazardousGlitch
    3 hours ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














HazardousGlitch had a good suggestion. I don't think I was drilling into to top of a stud because I had tried several holes before posting.



Opened up the wall more so I could position the drill closer to the drywall and went through easily. Above I posted the wrong photo that didn't have the deep hole. Now you can see the deep hole (left bottom) and the successful hole (right by the old wire). You can also see my other failed attempts.



Thanks for the help!



Successfully drilled througb






share|improve this answer





















  • Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
    – HazardousGlitch
    3 hours ago
















3














HazardousGlitch had a good suggestion. I don't think I was drilling into to top of a stud because I had tried several holes before posting.



Opened up the wall more so I could position the drill closer to the drywall and went through easily. Above I posted the wrong photo that didn't have the deep hole. Now you can see the deep hole (left bottom) and the successful hole (right by the old wire). You can also see my other failed attempts.



Thanks for the help!



Successfully drilled througb






share|improve this answer





















  • Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
    – HazardousGlitch
    3 hours ago














3












3








3






HazardousGlitch had a good suggestion. I don't think I was drilling into to top of a stud because I had tried several holes before posting.



Opened up the wall more so I could position the drill closer to the drywall and went through easily. Above I posted the wrong photo that didn't have the deep hole. Now you can see the deep hole (left bottom) and the successful hole (right by the old wire). You can also see my other failed attempts.



Thanks for the help!



Successfully drilled througb






share|improve this answer












HazardousGlitch had a good suggestion. I don't think I was drilling into to top of a stud because I had tried several holes before posting.



Opened up the wall more so I could position the drill closer to the drywall and went through easily. Above I posted the wrong photo that didn't have the deep hole. Now you can see the deep hole (left bottom) and the successful hole (right by the old wire). You can also see my other failed attempts.



Thanks for the help!



Successfully drilled througb







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









TypeKG

564




564












  • Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
    – HazardousGlitch
    3 hours ago


















  • Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
    – HazardousGlitch
    3 hours ago
















Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
– HazardousGlitch
3 hours ago




Good to hear! Be sure to mark this as the answer.
– HazardousGlitch
3 hours ago


















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