Where can I find a really long drill bit (at most minuscule 48" long) for drilling through blocking within my walls?

I cannot seem to find any online stores that market this... I need a really long drill bit (with a small bore diameter) specifically at least 48" long. I enjoy wooden blocks halfway down my wall, and I want to drop a phone line through it, so I obligation a really long drill bit. Any suggestions? I will be doing this at least 5 times throughout my house (it is elder, and does not have deeply of wiring contained by the walls), so I want to do it right (instead of cutting holes within the drywall, or running the lines on the outside of the wall).

Thanks for your help!


Answers:    I know that Home Depot sell them because I have looked at them within. They are a standard drill with a long flexible shaft and a hole for a possible verbs cord in the drill tip.

They are call bell-installer's drill bits (probably from the old days when population had to put within the wiring for a doorbell and face the same problem you are facing)
You should be capable of find one at any electrical supply store. I was an alarm installer for over 12 years. You obligation a Flexable drill bit they come up to 6 feet surrounded by length (72") You may find a 1/4 inch diameter but most come in 3/8" and 1/2 "..I muse Home depot stocks them as well...

Good luck....
Builders merchant such as Travis Perkins may get stocks
home depot,lowes, or menards have them within their elect. department or hardware. they cost around $3o .
While you may find a long drill bit in a hardware store (the longest I ever saw be either 2 or 3 feet), how do you consider you're going to get the line or cable through more than one drilled wooden block? You won't be able to see beyond the first! Few folks use such long drills because they find other ways to accomplish the same item. Really long drills should only be used for going through hollow spaces horizontally, approaching walls, where, if basic, threading and fishing of the cable is possible. .
A wire or cable next to ANY stiffness will probably not follow an exactly straight path.

It seem you have a situation where on earth you MUST pull past its sell-by date some drywall from the wall and expose a full vertical path for your wants.
As long as you're going to be doing that, plan on using a loose (wider) conduit, so you can later go beyond additional telecommunication through the same road, so in one conduit you hold electrical service (switched and unswitched), coax lines for computer or video, and shielded audio/coax for audio or intercoms.

Pull out (or cut out) a path yawning enough to insert your hand (4 inches, minimum) on the side of the wall where you can tolerate the patch chore you're going to do. This might mean the side you don't usually see, or the side where on earth repainting will be easiest. The presence of insulation may dictate which side you work on. Read up on drywall patching with long pieces of drywall. (Using drywall patch usually invoves spanning a distance between uprights or cross-bars, so that some of the new drywall support comes from nail. Ending your long drywall holes at such wooden structural members is best.)
Through respectively wooden cross bar, expect you'll any have to saw or chisel your bridleway (or both), or drill vertically with a hole saw.

To pick up some time, don't put the outlet or plate down near the floor approaching ALMOST EVERYBODY does! Old people and race in wheelchairs can't get down there! Put the outlet or plate a short time ago low enough to be out of verbs when the usual furniture (table or desk) is there: 1.5 to 2 foot off the floor. Standard desk largeness is 29 inches. If you have conspicuous plates or outlets, paint or wallpaper them individually so they're not notice.

If you think the flex on the room side is still too noticeable, use a "cable cover" plastic trim to secrete the wires. They come in white and cream colors. They're also paintable.

If you can stand seeing a long stretch of cable-cover trim on a wall, you could drop a cable from the ceiling less than 1 inch from the wall, and cover the entire stretch beside this plastic trim. If your decor makes use of mo(u)lding, you can drop a chain or cable at a corner of the room outside the wall(s), and cover it with corner molding. A few styles of molding work on projecting corners, as all right as sunken corners of a room. To get the ceiling hole surrounded by the right place, drill up from the room, then check the ceiling space to see if it come out in an agreeable place.

Plan ahead.
My husband (who is a builder) says that Lowes take them. No idea what the cost is but check out the store.
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