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Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

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  • Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

    Hi guys,

    Has anyone used Travertine as a bench top or know someone who has. I?m in the final stages of building my WFO and am about to tile the counter top. We where going to have a granite top but that blew the budget right out the window. Our local tile outlet recommended travertine tiles which we loved the look of and brought for the oven and a future outdoor kitchen. Once I brought them home and cut the 600mm x 600mm to 300mm x 300mm to make them more manageable I did some research. To my disappointment I have found out that perhaps that it was not a wise choice as it is porous, soft, subject to acid stain from things like lemon juice, tomato, beer and scratching even when sealed.

    Too late to take them back now. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

    Cheers,

    Mick

  • #2
    Re: Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

    HI
    I am no expert but I did a tied bench top in a indoor kitchen a few years back and just got a tile/grout sealer and painted that over the lot. Worked well for me. Someone at a good tile shop might be able to tell you what one to use. The one I used was a watery liquid that was invisible after it dried.
    Just my bit
    Rob
    Last edited by robertjusher; 10-30-2011, 03:50 AM. Reason: can't speell

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    • #3
      Re: Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

      Hi Rob,

      I was given a sealer and was hoping that it would do the job. My tiles are honed and unfilled. I think I might fill the holes with sand less grout to make it more water tight, does take away from the character of the stone though. Do you get any staining on the travertine; is it as ?precious? as everyone makes it out to be?

      Cheers,

      Mick

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      • #4
        Re: Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

        Travertine is just limestone, so I wouldn't be cleaning it with hydrochloric acid. Travertine weathers reasonably well. The Colosseum is the largest travertine structure in the world today, and while not perfect, it will probably outlast you. Both my office and house floors are travertine.

        You can buy an epoxy for filling the cavities rather than using grout. It looks better and holds up better. Then you should coat it with a penetrating sealer.

        Travertine does have hidden cavities. A very thin layer of stone covers them and the tile may appear completely sound, but if you place a point load on it, the stone will cave in. Probably not an issue for a countertop, but it is for a floor.

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        • #5
          Re: Counter top advise. Help needed... Please

          Did some research on epoxy and have decided to go with that, thanks azatty. I?ll go and buy a sample pot and try it on one tile. At least now I won?t have to worry about damaging the stone plus it will keep its natural look. I will post some pic?s once I have finished the top. I am just waiting on some decorative moulding to make up the border between the bench top tiles and the rendered base.

          Mick

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