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Cutting corrugated plastic pipe


echoechoecho
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They will all do it, some being more difficult than others ie jigsaw. And some will be smoother finish. I would personally go for the skil saw ( Circular saw) I’ve cut those 200lt blue drums in half with an angle grinder and a diamond stone cutting disk it left a nice smooth finish and lots of staticky charged bits a mask would be worth wearing unless the wind is in your favour, and it was slow. the stone/ metal grinder disk just clogged up. 
 

but if your really pushed you could just as easy do it with a good hand saw

 

let us know how you do it and your experience ??

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Thanks for the advice.

I've cut plenty of soil pipe and 4" land drainage with a hand saw, but assumed the wall thickness of the larger pipe would make it slow going.

I'm replacing an old stone-lined culvert with 24" corrugated pipe as a section of the roof collapsed during particularly heavy rain in late February, blocking the stream. The water was lapping up at the house and threatening to flood my workshop.

I cleared the blockage as soon as the water level dropped, and for the last 3 months we've had a big hole in the garden.

Cheers,
Mark

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51 minutes ago, echoechoecho said:

Thanks for the advice.

I've cut plenty of soil pipe and 4" land drainage with a hand saw, but assumed the wall thickness of the larger pipe would make it slow going.

I'm replacing an old stone-lined culvert with 24" corrugated pipe as a section of the roof collapsed during particularly heavy rain in late February, blocking the stream. The water was lapping up at the house and threatening to flood my workshop.

I cleared the blockage as soon as the water level dropped, and for the last 3 months we've had a big hole in the garden.

Cheers,
Mark

we cut that pipe with a chainsaw and have done for many years now, it wont do any harm to anything as it is a relativly soft plastic,

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Chainsaw all the way. Plastics should be cut with teeth, not abrasives. As mentioned abrasives will just clog up. Type of plastic matters- you can get away with a chainsaw easily on soft twinwall, but you're liable to shatter a 110mm pipe using the same.

 

The metal cutting blades in a circular saw make a nice job quickly of harder plastics as well as larger things like barrels. The teeth have much less rake compared to a wood blade, plus a raker like a chainsaw chain so they don't grab.

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I took both a chainsaw and reciprocating saw with me when I went to pick up the pipe on Tuesday,
but it cut easily with the recipro saw and fine metal blade. I tidied up the edge with a flap disc afterwards.

If only laying the pipe was as easy - machinery would have made short work of lifting some of the larger stone slabs out of the trench, but it's been interesting having to improvise with a homemade crane, straps and a come-along.

Cheers,
Mark

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11 minutes ago, echoechoecho said:

I took both a chainsaw and reciprocating saw with me when I went to pick up the pipe on Tuesday,
but it cut easily with the recipro saw and fine metal blade. I tidied up the edge with a flap disc afterwards.

If only laying the pipe was as easy - machinery would have made short work of lifting some of the larger stone slabs out of the trench, but it's been interesting having to improvise with a homemade crane, straps and a come-along.

Cheers,
Mark

I've cut and spun them with a tenon saw, drainage is hard graft. Should have listened more at school...

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