Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi,
Here's the look I want: http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron |
#2
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... Hi, Here's the look I want: http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron granite comes in any shape you want. it comes out of the quarry in sheets about 6'x10' or larger, and polished. it can be cut dry with a diamond blade, or on a wet saw if you have smaller pieces, unless you get it fabricated at a place that makes kitchen countertops. these are about the size of sink cutout. you might want to ask them for a bunch of scraps and work on them yourself. they'll be slippery as greased glass when wet. you could sandblast them to make them rough, but they won't look very pretty. that's why they use slate in this application. |
#3
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 1, 1:01*pm, "charlie" wrote:
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... Hi, Here's the look I want:http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron granite comes in any shape you want. it comes out of the quarry in sheets about 6'x10' or larger, and polished. it can be cut dry with a diamond blade, or on a wet saw if you have smaller pieces, unless you get it fabricated at a place that makes kitchen countertops. these are about the size of sink cutout. you might want to ask them for a bunch of scraps and work on them yourself. they'll be slippery as greased glass when wet. you could sandblast them to make them rough, but they won't look very pretty. that's why they use slate in this application. The asking around at a countertop outlet is a great idea. The sink cutouts might be just what you're looking for, and typically a countertop slab is polished only on one side. The reverse side will probably look like dull stone, however, as granite doesn't necessarily stand out until polished. Some places may have boneyards too, scraps too small for any real installation. They can be spendy, however, even tho they may be scrap. |
#4
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
gwandsh wrote:
On Sep 1, 1:01 pm, "charlie" wrote: "Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... Hi, Here's the look I want:http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron granite comes in any shape you want. it comes out of the quarry in sheets about 6'x10' or larger, and polished. it can be cut dry with a diamond blade, or on a wet saw if you have smaller pieces, unless you get it fabricated at a place that makes kitchen countertops. these are about the size of sink cutout. you might want to ask them for a bunch of scraps and work on them yourself. they'll be slippery as greased glass when wet. you could sandblast them to make them rough, but they won't look very pretty. that's why they use slate in this application. The asking around at a countertop outlet is a great idea. The sink cutouts might be just what you're looking for, and typically a countertop slab is polished only on one side. The reverse side will probably look like dull stone, however, as granite doesn't necessarily stand out until polished. Some places may have boneyards too, scraps too small for any real installation. They can be spendy, however, even tho they may be scrap. Can 1.5" granite be cut on a wet saw? |
#5
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... gwandsh wrote: On Sep 1, 1:01 pm, "charlie" wrote: "Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... Hi, Here's the look I want:http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron granite comes in any shape you want. it comes out of the quarry in sheets about 6'x10' or larger, and polished. it can be cut dry with a diamond blade, or on a wet saw if you have smaller pieces, unless you get it fabricated at a place that makes kitchen countertops. these are about the size of sink cutout. you might want to ask them for a bunch of scraps and work on them yourself. they'll be slippery as greased glass when wet. you could sandblast them to make them rough, but they won't look very pretty. that's why they use slate in this application. The asking around at a countertop outlet is a great idea. The sink cutouts might be just what you're looking for, and typically a countertop slab is polished only on one side. The reverse side will probably look like dull stone, however, as granite doesn't necessarily stand out until polished. Some places may have boneyards too, scraps too small for any real installation. They can be spendy, however, even tho they may be scrap. Can 1.5" granite be cut on a wet saw? it depends upon the size of the blade, not the material. a 10" wet saw can cut up to about 3.5" thick before it starts running into problems with clearance. |
#6
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
charlie wrote:
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... gwandsh wrote: On Sep 1, 1:01 pm, "charlie" wrote: "Aaron Fude" wrote in message ... Hi, Here's the look I want:http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. Thanks in advance, Aaron granite comes in any shape you want. it comes out of the quarry in sheets about 6'x10' or larger, and polished. it can be cut dry with a diamond blade, or on a wet saw if you have smaller pieces, unless you get it fabricated at a place that makes kitchen countertops. these are about the size of sink cutout. you might want to ask them for a bunch of scraps and work on them yourself. they'll be slippery as greased glass when wet. you could sandblast them to make them rough, but they won't look very pretty. that's why they use slate in this application. The asking around at a countertop outlet is a great idea. The sink cutouts might be just what you're looking for, and typically a countertop slab is polished only on one side. The reverse side will probably look like dull stone, however, as granite doesn't necessarily stand out until polished. Some places may have boneyards too, scraps too small for any real installation. They can be spendy, however, even tho they may be scrap. Can 1.5" granite be cut on a wet saw? it depends upon the size of the blade, not the material. a 10" wet saw can cut up to about 3.5" thick before it starts running into problems with clearance. So I've learned that the roughest granite will come is "honed". That's way not rough enough for my application, I presume. Unless there is a way to rough it up - e.g. blast with something? Any ideas? |
#7
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 01 Sep 2009 15:45:55 -0400, Aaron Fude
wrote: Hi, Here's the look I want: http://freeboundaries.com/path.jpg BUT, I would like granite in place of slate. Does granite come in that shape? Or can I cut it to that shape on a wet saw. Anyway, how would I go about achieving this look with granite? Of course in needs to be rough so it's not slippery. In what part of the world do you live? if in northern NY, VT, or NH - and maybe lots of other places- there is a quarry close enough to look at & see what they have & if they'll split the stone for you. Granite comes in a bunch of colors, coarseness & grades. Jim |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Looks like PC is following the path of B&D | Woodworking | |||
The path before me | Woodturning | |||
Making a path... | UK diy | |||
Washing builders pebbles | UK diy |