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D'Olier June 24th 03 03:58 AM

Kitchen counter
 
We have one of those kitchen counters with what looks like a laminate top
stuck onto some wood. Part of it was damaged a few months ago and I went to
HD and Lowes to ask about getting a replacement 'patch'. They said I can
only buy it with the wood attached and I'd have to replace the whole
counter - or at least a good section of it. The damage is only about 3"x3".
There must be a way to buy just the surface part and stick it on without
having to replace the whole wooden piece.

Anybody know where I can buy the piece I need?

Thanks.

Paul



Kevin O' June 24th 03 04:19 AM

Kitchen counter
 
Hi,

Here's my .02 worth...

The material used to support the laminate is very cheap (10' x 25" costs
about $15.00 at my local lumber yard), the laminate itself is the cheapest
countertop material - so why not remove the damaged section and replace it?a
"patch" will look like hell, and probably cost as much in time/labor...

Good Luck,

Kevin O'


"D'Olier" wrote in message
...
We have one of those kitchen counters with what looks like a laminate top
stuck onto some wood. Part of it was damaged a few months ago and I went

to
HD and Lowes to ask about getting a replacement 'patch'. They said I can
only buy it with the wood attached and I'd have to replace the whole
counter - or at least a good section of it. The damage is only about

3"x3".
There must be a way to buy just the surface part and stick it on without
having to replace the whole wooden piece.

Anybody know where I can buy the piece I need?

Thanks.

Paul





John W. Wells June 24th 03 05:49 AM

Kitchen counter
 
On Mon, 23 Jun 2003 21:58:27 -0500, "D'Olier" wrote:

We have one of those kitchen counters with what looks like a laminate top
stuck onto some wood. Part of it was damaged a few months ago and I went to
HD and Lowes to ask about getting a replacement 'patch'. They said I can
only buy it with the wood attached and I'd have to replace the whole
counter - or at least a good section of it. The damage is only about 3"x3".
There must be a way to buy just the surface part and stick it on without
having to replace the whole wooden piece.

Anybody know where I can buy the piece I need?


Some 15 years ago I had an electric coffee maker go south and burn a 3
inch patch in the Formica laminate of my kitchen counter--the intense
heat caused the laminate to bubble up and crack.

I managed to find a scrap of the very same pattern (whatta
surprise--the counter was 20 years old by that time) at a store. I
think it was the sort of store that sold resilient floor
covering--don't remember for sure.

So I cut out a 3" disk from the scrap, laid it on the burned area,
traced around it with a pen, and then carefully routed out the bad
stuff with my rarely-used-but-at-times-indispensible Dremel tool (I
don't own a real router). I used epoxy to glue in the patch.

Of course it's noticeable, but hardly so. Just a thin gray line
around the periphery of the patch. And completely water-tight. It
was holding just fine when I sold the house a year ago.

--John W. Wells

Carpenter Ant June 24th 03 11:59 AM

Kitchen counter
 

"D'Olier" wrote in message
...
We have one of those kitchen counters with what looks like a laminate top
stuck onto some wood. Part of it was damaged a few months ago and I went

to
HD and Lowes to ask about getting a replacement 'patch'. They said I can
only buy it with the wood attached and I'd have to replace the whole
counter - or at least a good section of it. The damage is only about

3"x3".
There must be a way to buy just the surface part and stick it on without
having to replace the whole wooden piece.

Anybody know where I can buy the piece I need?

Thanks.

Paul



-------------------------------------------------------
Repairing laminate is nearly impossible
why not route out a removable cutting board or hot plate area where the
3"x3" patch is needed.
-------------------------------------------------------



D'Olier June 25th 03 03:21 AM

Kitchen counter
 

"John W. Wells" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 23 Jun 2003 21:58:27 -0500, "D'Olier" wrote:

We have one of those kitchen counters with what looks like a laminate top
stuck onto some wood. Part of it was damaged a few months ago and I went

to
HD and Lowes to ask about getting a replacement 'patch'. They said I can
only buy it with the wood attached and I'd have to replace the whole
counter - or at least a good section of it. The damage is only about

3"x3".
There must be a way to buy just the surface part and stick it on without
having to replace the whole wooden piece.

Anybody know where I can buy the piece I need?


Some 15 years ago I had an electric coffee maker go south and burn a 3
inch patch in the Formica laminate of my kitchen counter--the intense
heat caused the laminate to bubble up and crack.

I managed to find a scrap of the very same pattern (whatta
surprise--the counter was 20 years old by that time) at a store. I
think it was the sort of store that sold resilient floor
covering--don't remember for sure.

So I cut out a 3" disk from the scrap, laid it on the burned area,
traced around it with a pen, and then carefully routed out the bad
stuff with my rarely-used-but-at-times-indispensible Dremel tool (I
don't own a real router). I used epoxy to glue in the patch.

Of course it's noticeable, but hardly so. Just a thin gray line
around the periphery of the patch. And completely water-tight. It
was holding just fine when I sold the house a year ago.

--John W. Wells


Now this is what I want to do. I could live with a barely noticeable line
around the patch. The thing is, where do I get the laminate. The house is
only three years old so it should be available but as I've mentioned the big
two (Lowes and HD) have said das ist verboten.





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