IN

"Ivan"

29/05/2004 5:24 PM

Counter top questions

Hi ya'll,

I had a couple of questions regarding counter tops:
1.) When gluing laminate, should I do the edge first then the top or
viceversa?
2.) We are putting in a tile backsplash. Should we instal the tile first
then install and butt up the countertop against the tile
or should we install the countertop, and then install the backsplash?
Im a bit confused as you can see.

Thanks a bunch in advance,

Ivan


This topic has 5 replies

IN

"Ivan"

in reply to "Ivan" on 29/05/2004 5:24 PM

29/05/2004 8:20 PM


">
> alt.building.construction or alt.home.repair(?) would be a better ng.
>
> That said, for self-edge laminate, glue and flushtrim the edges first,
then
> the top.
> Do your countertop before the tile if you have a choice. Fitting laminate
> against an irregular surface is less than fun. Tape off the lam to
prevent
> scratches.
>
>
Thanks for your answer and sorry for the post on this group....This is where
I lurk 80% of the time.

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "Ivan" on 29/05/2004 5:24 PM

29/05/2004 11:31 PM

When dealing with tops and fronts and backs, think about which way the water
is going to go.
Put the front edge on first followed by the top, on top of that. With the
back splash, put the counter top on first and set the splash on top of that.
Basically, do not leave a joint exposed that water can run down into.






"Ivan" <NO_SPAMaifeliciano@NO_SPAMsbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi ya'll,
>
> I had a couple of questions regarding counter tops:
> 1.) When gluing laminate, should I do the edge first then the top or
> viceversa?
> 2.) We are putting in a tile backsplash. Should we instal the tile first
> then install and butt up the countertop against the tile
> or should we install the countertop, and then install the
backsplash?
> Im a bit confused as you can see.
>
> Thanks a bunch in advance,
>
> Ivan
>
>

ER

"Eric Ryder"

in reply to "Ivan" on 29/05/2004 5:24 PM

29/05/2004 3:31 PM


"Ivan" <NO_SPAMaifeliciano@NO_SPAMsbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi ya'll,
>
> I had a couple of questions regarding counter tops:
> 1.) When gluing laminate, should I do the edge first then the top or
> viceversa?
> 2.) We are putting in a tile backsplash. Should we instal the tile first
> then install and butt up the countertop against the tile
> or should we install the countertop, and then install the
backsplash?
> Im a bit confused as you can see.
>
> Thanks a bunch in advance,
>
> Ivan
>
>

alt.building.construction or alt.home.repair(?) would be a better ng.

That said, for self-edge laminate, glue and flushtrim the edges first, then
the top.
Do your countertop before the tile if you have a choice. Fitting laminate
against an irregular surface is less than fun. Tape off the lam to prevent
scratches.

AB

Alan Bierbaum

in reply to "Ivan" on 29/05/2004 5:24 PM

29/05/2004 1:29 PM

On Sat, 29 May 2004 17:24:47 GMT, "Ivan"
<NO_SPAMaifeliciano@NO_SPAMsbcglobal.net> wrote:

>Hi ya'll,
>
>I had a couple of questions regarding counter tops:
>1.) When gluing laminate, should I do the edge first then the top or
>viceversa?
>2.) We are putting in a tile backsplash. Should we instal the tile first
>then install and butt up the countertop against the tile
> or should we install the countertop, and then install the backsplash?
>Im a bit confused as you can see.
>
>Thanks a bunch in advance,
>
>Ivan
>

"Normally" the edge is put on first; then the deck material.
I would tile on top of the counter top. This way the fit to a
non-straight wall only has to be within 1/4" as the tile will cover
the gap(s). Set the tile on the top and caulk the seam; not grout.
This also lets you remove the top, for replacement, without having
tile problems.

Alan Bierbaum

web site: http://www.calanb.com

IN

"Ivan"

in reply to "Ivan" on 29/05/2004 5:24 PM

29/05/2004 8:18 PM


>
> "Normally" the edge is put on first; then the deck material.
> I would tile on top of the counter top. This way the fit to a
> non-straight wall only has to be within 1/4" as the tile will cover
> the gap(s). Set the tile on the top and caulk the seam; not grout.
> This also lets you remove the top, for replacement, without having
> tile problems.
>
> Alan Bierbaum
>
> web site: http://www.calanb.com


Thanks Alan :-)


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