What is Wall Sawing?

kansascityAdmin • March 26, 2020

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Many times, Kansas City residents contact us to ask, “are you able to . . . ?” They may not be familiar with the name of the cut they need to have completed. Often, they don’t know the type of equipment utilized in such a cut, either. We understand that we work in a very specialized industry. Give Kansas City Coring and Cutting a call at 816-523-2015 and describe your project. We will be happy to visit your job site to offer a free quote for the work.

Today, we would like to utilize our blog to describe one of the services we offer. Let’s learn about wall sawing. We will discuss why you may need to hire us to run a wall saw. We will also tell you about our equipment, and explain why you should choose KC Coring and Cutting to complete your project.

Using our state-of-the-art equipment, our technicians are able to make precise vertical and horizontal cuts on concrete, brick, or masonry walls. We are also able to use the same equipment to make cuts on ceilings, beams, and columns as well.

There are many reasons you may need to hire Kansas City Coring and Cutting for such a project. Perhaps you need to cut a hole for a door or window. Maybe you need to make a precise cut for the installation of an HVAC, electrical, or plumbing systems. Perhaps the cuts need to be performed to insert fixtures in their place or to add stairways. Regardless of the reason, if you need to make a precise straight cut through a concrete wall, we can do the work for you.

Our crew utilizes a special track-mounted wall saw that can be operated manually or by remote. Having this flexibility is perfect for doing cutting jobs in hard-to-reach locations. Our saws cut as deep as 24”, but if needed, we can make deeper cuts by cutting from both sides of the wall. The circular diamond blade is used to make accurate cuts.

As you can imagine, it takes a highly-skilled technician to do this type of work. Since the staff of KC Cutting and Coring specializes in difficult cutting jobs, you shouldn’t be surprised that we can do wall cutting in any angle, shape, or size. Our techs will leave a clean finish that will not damage the rest of the structure.

Why reach out to KC Cutting and Coring? We are known in the Kansas City construction and renovation industry because we have decades of experience.

One of the things that makes KC Cutting and Coring stand out is our strict adherence to safety protocols. In fact, we have a full-time Safety Director on staff whose job it is to assure that all the crews on the job site are safe when we are completing our part of the project.

Additionally, when you work with Kansas City Cutting and Coring, you are working with a locally-owned and operated company. We love serving our Kansas City community, and we are proud of the work we do for our neighbors and friends.

Give us a call today. No job is too big or too small. Let us help you with your project.

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When a building is still in use, every construction decision carries extra weight. Patients in hospital rooms, students in classrooms, and employees at their desks never signed up to deal with jackhammer noise, clouds of dust, or structural uncertainty overhead. That is exactly why concrete core drilling has become the go-to method for contractors and facility managers working in occupied or active buildings. It creates clean, circular openings through concrete slabs, walls, and ceilings with minimal vibration, controlled dust, and no impact damage to surrounding structure. For municipalities, school districts, hospital systems, and commercial property owners across Kansas City, it is not just the safest option. It is often the only responsible one. What Makes Core Drilling Different From Other Cutting Methods? Core drilling removes a cylindrical section of concrete using a diamond-tipped bit mounted on a specialized rig. The bit rotates at high speed and cuts through the material without transferring force into the surrounding slab or wall. There is no pounding, no chipping, and no cracking radiating outward from the cut zone. Compare that to jackhammers or impact tools, which work by breaking concrete through repeated force. That force does not stay in one place. It moves through the structure, rattles adjacent surfaces, and can weaken connections you cannot even see. In a building where people are working or receiving care, that kind of vibration is not acceptable. Other concrete sawing methods like flat sawing or wall sawing are excellent for specific applications, but they require more space, produce more surface disruption, and are harder to deploy inside tight or sensitive interior environments. Core drilling fits where other methods simply cannot. How Does Core Drilling Protect Building Occupants? This is where the method earns its reputation in occupied settings. The protection comes from three main factors working together. Dust control through wet drilling. Diamond core bits are used with a continuous water feed that cools the bit and captures concrete particles as slurry before they become airborne. This directly addresses one of the most serious health risks in concrete work: crystalline silica. When silica dust gets into the air, it is invisible and dangerous. Wet drilling keeps it contained at the source. Our team follows OSHA silica standards on every job, and the wet drilling process is central to that compliance. Low vibration output. Because the bit cuts by rotation rather than impact, the surrounding structure absorbs almost nothing. This matters enormously in hospitals where sensitive medical equipment is in use, or in schools where structural movement could affect adjacent classrooms. No collateral damage to finishes. A core drill produces a clean, round hole with smooth edges. There is no spalling, no cracking, and no need to patch the surrounding surface. That means less mess, fewer follow-up trades needed, and faster project completion without visible evidence of the work in adjacent spaces. What Happens Before the First Drill Even Starts? One of the most overlooked parts of safe core drilling in occupied buildings is what happens before any equipment is turned on. Drilling blind into a concrete slab is one of the most avoidable mistakes in construction, and yet it still causes costly project delays and structural incidents every year. At KC Coring, every occupied-building project begins with a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) scan . GPR sends electromagnetic pulses into the concrete and maps what is inside: rebar, post-tension cables, conduit, plumbing lines, and electrical runs. The results show up as real-time images on a high-performance tablet right on the job site, giving our technicians a clear picture of exactly where it is safe to drill. This step is non-negotiable in hospitals and schools. Post-tension cables, in particular, are under enormous stress. Cutting one without knowing it is there can cause immediate structural failure. GPR eliminates that risk entirely by giving the team a verified map before anyone picks up a drill. Is Core Drilling Practical for Large-Scale Facility Work? Contractors sometimes assume core drilling is only for small, one-off penetrations. That assumption leaves a lot of capability on the table. Core drilling can produce holes ranging from a quarter inch all the way up to 66 inches in diameter. It works horizontally, vertically, at angles, above ground, below ground, and even underwater. For large mechanical or HVAC penetrations in a hospital retrofit, that range of capability is exactly what the job demands. In Kansas City, we regularly work on active facilities where multiple penetrations are needed across different floors and zones. 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