
Originally Posted by
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They are a little expensive but I'd get a 6" hole saw.
$ 60 to $100 dollars a piece not to mention the mandrel you need to use that size hole saw. Cutting plaster is basically cutting concrete.
If you have a whole room a hole saw will wear out so quick. We use them to cut holes in plaster ceilings for can lights. At times I only get 1 1/2 to 2 holes per hole saw bits. Gets Real expensive Quick...
The other reason we remove base board more then not is having enough access to drill straight holes in the studs to stay within codes and also to reach up in the wall to slip a conduct down into the wall switch hole to bottom plate area. Its all about not being able to staple it to code in lengths. Or cut out more plaster on those verticals and not saving the plaster walls
Bill43lake.. Personally since drywall is going over the whole wall I would use short sazall blades and rough it in. It doesn't matter if the plaster cracks or not. You need to screw the drywall with long drywall screws to hit studs. Construction adhesive on the plaster.
Use a hammer and punch through the wall to check for mechanicals in wall then sawzall. What you are doing here is done on our rehab sites all the time. In the old houses, to get insulation in the plaster sloped attic walls we cut out sections between roof rafters and pull faced insulation through the laddered holes and then drywall. A lot of the house we work on 1800/1900s have no electric to many of rooms. Never woried about the plaster that much because it all gets drywall. As long as it fairly intact in places no worries here.