Is "shimming" one edge of a polished concrete countertop a bad idea? And if not, what makes a good shim?
I will be installing said countertop (2" thick, poured off-site) on top of my existing concrete cantilevered hearth (picture of cantilever covered with junk). I was planning on using a construction adhesive to bond the 2 concrete layers together, but if I want a little slope for runoff I'll need to add shims under the back edge. The shelf is about 12" deep, front to back, so I think 3/16" shims would be enough (yes?).
I was thinking maybe a strip of Durock would work nicely, but will the resulting air pocket under the shelf weaken it too much? Would filling that pocket with adhesive solve it?
Or maybe a slope isn't necessary for a small shelf like that? Just trying to get good drainage away from the oven.
- Confused in Wisconsin (aka Daren)
I will be installing said countertop (2" thick, poured off-site) on top of my existing concrete cantilevered hearth (picture of cantilever covered with junk). I was planning on using a construction adhesive to bond the 2 concrete layers together, but if I want a little slope for runoff I'll need to add shims under the back edge. The shelf is about 12" deep, front to back, so I think 3/16" shims would be enough (yes?).
I was thinking maybe a strip of Durock would work nicely, but will the resulting air pocket under the shelf weaken it too much? Would filling that pocket with adhesive solve it?
Or maybe a slope isn't necessary for a small shelf like that? Just trying to get good drainage away from the oven.
- Confused in Wisconsin (aka Daren)
Comment