Yesterday I took care of one piece of work on the railings that has been 
haunting me all winter.  One deck post needed to be mounted to the house. 
I have come to hate hammer drilling into these bricks.  I don't know what 
they are made of, but whatever it is, it is a lot harder than an 
expensive, brand new, masonry bit.

First we stood the post up in place.  Then we marked where the holes 
should be to put them in a brick and not in crumbling mortar.  Took the 
post down and drilled half inch holes in all three spots.  Then we drilled 
one inch countersink holes so that the heads of the expansion bolts would 
be below the surface of the post.

Then we stood the post back in place and used the hammer drill to drill 
through the post and into the brick.  The bit wasn't nearly long enough so 
I got about 3/4 inch into the brick before I bottomed out against the 4X4 
post.

Took the post away and then finished drilling the bricks to depth.  By the 
time I got to the third and final hole, I was cursing and swearing, 
sweating like a pig, and having to take breaks before I got the hole to 
depth.

It is just damn tough brick.

Anyway, got the post back in position, hammered the six inch expansion 
bolts in, and cranked them home.  We will definitely pull bricks out of 
the wall before those bolts come out.

I had to rout a dado in one of the other posts that somehow got installed 
without a dado.  I then cut and fit all the bottom rails for the railing. 
This weekend I will begin assembling the railings.

there is one post left to deal with.  It will be a bit tricky.  It is on 
the transition where a little spur of deck wraps around the back of the 
house, it slopes downward to meet up with the landing outside the back 
door which is a bit lower than the rest of the deck.

I need to dado one side, but then bevel the edges of the dado so that a 
2X4 rail will fit nice and clean as it will be at an angle to the post 
itself and not sticking straight out.  I'll also have to bevel half the 
top of the post so that the railing will also make a smooth transition 
from horizontal to downward sloping.

I bet that takes either a whole lot of time, or I will have to use that 
extra post that is waiting in the wings.

  -- 
Blue skies.
Dan Rossi
Carnegie Mellon University.
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tel:    (412) 268-9081

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