snakebornella
24th May 2006, 03:56 PM
We have recently bought a new house and it came with a brand new kitchen - the problem is that the kicthen is too small and we brought a 90cm freestanding stove with us - our dilema is that we need to make way for the 90cm stove which requires the benchtops to come off to make way for cutdown cabinets and to allow it to be cut and polished before being reinstalled
the benches are fixed to the cabinets with some sort of epoxy glue and joined in 2 places (the main one in an L shaped piece around the sink and the other at the wall near the breakfast bar) - the current stove cut-out is half way along the narrow section of the L shaped peice of stone
oh, and by the way there is a glass splashback sitting on top of the benchtop so my guess is that if we want to try to save that we need to cut the caesarstone at the midpoint of the existing cut-out, remove the silicone around the bottom edge of the glass splashback, pull out the smaller straight section then use the freed up space to pull out the L shaped section
Qs
- how do we neatly cut the filler in the join between the 2 pieces of stone at the sink???
- how do we cut the epoxy between the bench and the cabinets???
- is this the right approach or do we have to take the kitchen contractors advice and sacrifice the glass splashback and maybe even sacrifice the L shaped piece of stone???
whilst I am at it can anyone recommend someone in Sydney who can help with cutting/polishing/supplying caesarstone
the benches are fixed to the cabinets with some sort of epoxy glue and joined in 2 places (the main one in an L shaped piece around the sink and the other at the wall near the breakfast bar) - the current stove cut-out is half way along the narrow section of the L shaped peice of stone
oh, and by the way there is a glass splashback sitting on top of the benchtop so my guess is that if we want to try to save that we need to cut the caesarstone at the midpoint of the existing cut-out, remove the silicone around the bottom edge of the glass splashback, pull out the smaller straight section then use the freed up space to pull out the L shaped section
Qs
- how do we neatly cut the filler in the join between the 2 pieces of stone at the sink???
- how do we cut the epoxy between the bench and the cabinets???
- is this the right approach or do we have to take the kitchen contractors advice and sacrifice the glass splashback and maybe even sacrifice the L shaped piece of stone???
whilst I am at it can anyone recommend someone in Sydney who can help with cutting/polishing/supplying caesarstone