indeed that stuff is so handy. note don't forget to attach a pull rope to
the wire ur pulling so u can pull another one next time. o and never run
data cables next to power....
as the power will blead out a bit and can interfeer with ur data lines
done lots of industrial work managing cable trays
On Mon, Oct 8, 2012 at 12:59 PM, Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com> wrote:
  On Mon, Oct 8, 2012 at 1:17 PM, David Riley
<fraveydank at gmail.com> wrote:
  Well, I wanted it to remain straight in the end;
it just needed to
 go straight up through the walls.  The problem was one of simple
 geometry, specifically inserting a 10-foot pipe vertically into the
 wall-ceiling junction of a 6-foot basement.  I didn't particularly
 want to cut it, and the pipe resumed its previous shape fairly
 quickly once I got it into the wall. 
 Gotcha.  That's part of why I went with Innerduct - I'd worked with it
 in a commercial setting and was able to buy 100' off the reel at a local
 Granger's supply.
 If I were trying large PVC conduit in a short basement, I'd also consider
 a joint in the middle, but it seems that you worked it all out.
  I was just lucky enough that the folks who had
rehabbed the house
 back in the '80s and added an HVAC system had left extra space
 around the old chimney when they put in the duct work (and also
 lucky that said space intersected my office).  I ended up with
 a built-in channel running straight from the basement to the
 top floor for free; all I needed was to put a pipe in there so
 the wires had some guidance going down. 
 I had the same advantage in my 85-yro house (now 98-yro!) - next
 to the stackpipe is a laundry chute from the bathroom to the
 basement.  The back bedroom shared a wall with that, and there
 was room around it to run the innerduct.  I did have to rip a large
 hole in the bedroom wall to mount the various duplex boxes
 since it wasn't easy to find larger low-voltage boxes.  Now, I
 can goe to Lowe's and get the big orange plastic wall boxes
 that even directly accept (with concentric breakouts) 1" and
 larger conduit.
 If I ever build a house, I'm going to run innerduct all over
 the place.  The stuff is really handy to work with (and comes
 with pull-rope/tape already installed).  It's specifically designed
 for fiber, but there's no problem sharing the space with
 twisted pair low-voltage cables.
 -ethan