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08-19-2009, 05:33 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 126
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Cutting a hole in the kitchen counter top
I am replacing the kitchen sink faucet but the hole is to small so I need to enlarge the hole. Has anyone done this before and if so what type of cutting device did you use?
Larry
2004
40' MDTS
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08-19-2009, 05:50 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Fleetwood Owners Club
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Vancouver, USA (WA, that is) the first one!
Posts: 302
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alpine4us
I am replacing the kitchen sink faucet but the hole is to small so I need to enlarge the hole. Has anyone done this before and if so what type of cutting device did you use?
Larry
2004
40' MDTS
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Can't say I've used one on a kitchen counter, but the first thing that comes to mind is my hole saw attachment for my 3/8" drill, with different diameter blades.
__________________
Ken & Carolee, 1994 36' Pace Arrow/Ford 7.5L, Mobil 1 full syn & Banks Pack. Towing a 1999 Saturn SL2 with Roadmaster Sterling All-Terrain & Brake Buddy.
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08-19-2009, 06:22 PM
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#3
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Senior Member
Solo Rvers Club
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Zigzag, OR
Posts: 1,063
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The hole saw would be great, and my first choice also, if a circular cut will do the job. But if you need an oblong hole, you might have to make two or three cuts with the hole saw to create an oblong, still the best choice.
__________________
'07 Itasca 35L/W22 FULL-TIMING
1000 Trails - VFW - 5 Yrs Army
"NOT ALL WHO WANDER ARE LOST"
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08-19-2009, 08:15 PM
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#4
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 214
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A Hand Drill & Hole Saw would be the logical first choice for cutting an initial hole, but it will present a significant problem trying to enlarge an existing hole with this method. The hole saw depends on its pilot bit to keep hole saw centered but with an existing hole the pilot bit has nothing to bite into to keep the saw from wandering all over the place. If you can figure a way to clamp some scrap material under existing hole and lengthen pilot bit to bite into the scrap material before saw teeth engage counter top then it will be pretty much the same as hole sawing an initial hole. Either that or some type of drill press anchored so that the hole saw does not wander all over the place & tear up the counter top. Also, depending on size of hole, may need a hand drill with1/2” chuck.
I used a hole saw to allow installation of soap dispensers in both bathroom vanities and had no problem. But both of these were initial holes. I would recommend using a quality hole saw, not one of the El Cheapos.
BTF
05 40FDQS
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08-19-2009, 08:24 PM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Summer Rowlett TX (Why?)/Winter Palm Springs CA Two Springs RV Resort https://www.twospringsrv.com/
Posts: 526
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DO NOT TRY TO USE A HOLE SAW TO ENLARGE AN EXISTING HOLE!!!!!!! A hole saw has a small bit in the middle to center the hole and control the cutting action.
Some years ago back in Wichita, my wife bugged me about putting a deadbolt in the door to the garage. "Ok, I will get to it when all my other honeydos are done." Not satisified with this answer, she did it herself while I was at work. She had seen me drill a hole and then enlarge it to the proper size with the next size bit. So, she drilled a hole with a hole saw and then attempted to enlarge it with the next size hole saw. Being unable to center the second bit, she gouged the Hell out of the solid core oak door. It took her most of the day to repair the damage while our daughter and her friends were dividing up her things knowing that I was going to kill her.
If the new diameter is not much larger than the original hole, I would file it out with a rat tail file or a Dremel tool.
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Basil & Sue Shannon
Former Apex owner (Gary & Renee have it now)
Was Traveling Circus (2 clowns/Sage the Wonder Dog) Tent rotted. Circus folded.
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08-19-2009, 10:42 PM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Auburn, CA, Havasu, AZ & Mulege, BCS
Posts: 5,385
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Take the appropriate hole saw for the existing hole & cut some cheater slugs from 3/4 or so plywood, glue two or three of them together making a cylinder w/a pilot hole.
Slip the cylinder over the pilot point for the new hole size saw, to use the cylinder as the new pilot. You may want to wrap the cylinder w/a shim of vinyl or sheet metal flashing material to make up for the kerf of the original hole saw for a perfectly clean hole cut, or maybe the cylinder's imperfection will be covered by the new fixture bezel.
__________________
Baja-tested '08 2-slide 36'
Alpine: The Ultimate DIY'er Project
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08-20-2009, 12:05 AM
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#7
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Senior Member
Alpine Owners Club
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Long Beach, CA
Posts: 1,563
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In exact negative to eMike's idea, I just cut the new size hole in a piece of plywood (1/2" or more) then cut the plywood to fit up against the back wall, centering it where I want the new hole. I then use the holesaw again, working slowly to first score, then continue down into the countertop. You can just hold this "jig" until you are about 1/8" into the countertop. Then remove the jig and continue the cut.
__________________
2003 Alpine 40FDTS (400HP)
Long Beach, CA
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08-20-2009, 01:41 AM
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#8
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Registered User
Damon Owners Club Workhorse Chassis Owner
Join Date: May 2008
Location: N. Palm Springs CA (in winter)
Posts: 2,420
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The tool to use for a clean cut is a RotoZip
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08-20-2009, 04:57 AM
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#9
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Abington, PA
Posts: 1,103
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A roto zip or a round sanding drum close to the original hole size. If the new hole is to be quite a bit bigger. Glue a piece of 3/8" plywood over the existing hole, (BOTH SIDES)GLUE A PLUG IN THE EXISTING HOLE and go at it with a PROPER SIZED holesaw, VERY CAREFULLY.
__________________
Ted & Carol Ulmer
2005 Alpine 34', 34FDDS
2006 PT Turbo pusher
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08-20-2009, 09:18 AM
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#10
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 25
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jig saw
i've been installing cabinets and tops for about 25 years now, use a jig saw, just make sure you mark you're lines in the right place, all cuts should be inside/under the cover. you also may want to cover the bottom of the jig saw foot/pad with masking tape so you don't scratch the top.
as they say, measure twice and cut once. i can also say that i have gone to drop a non-standard sink in a hole i cut and it went all the way to the floor. no fun to replace a whole top just because you didn't take your time.
a Roto-Zip will do the same thing but they tend to want to runout, i'd use a jig to make sure that didn't happen.
__________________
Bob 06 Copper Canyon, 08 Dodge CTD
camping every chance i get
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08-20-2009, 04:48 PM
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#11
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Senior Member
Alpine Owners Club
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 1,100
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As long as it is a round hole, I have had success by installing a hole saw, the size of the hole you have, inside of a larger hole saw, the size needed. This will only work if they will both mount on the same mandrel. The smaller hole saw sticks out farther then the larger one and will hold the larger one in place like the drill on the mandrel will do for a normal cut. If done this way, be very cautious while starting the hole. The smaller hole saw does not stick out very far and can allow the larger saw jump out of its cut until it has cut into the counter.
__________________
Dale Gerstel
AMG GTS
Las Vegas, NV
Had: 2007 Limited SE 40fdts
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