Re: Concrete Counter Sanding and Parging
Here are some pics of my pour in place concrete counter. I spent several months reading up on the process and was convinced that the pour in place would not yield the appearance of form made tops because the nice colorful aggregaqte sinks in the wet mix to deep. With that in mind after troweling I added black, blue and white tumbled glass nuggets to the wet surface and tamped them down just into the top surface of my pour.
To get that top skim layer off and expose the glass I used a grinder with a diamond cup and for the polishing I used a Porter Cable R/O sander with 60-500 grid diamond pads. I applied water by hand as needed. I also used A GFI circuit for this process. As I had read the larg aggregate had settled to deep to see so I was very happy that I added the glass to the top surface. There was some aggregate present for polishing but it was very small and There was no way I was going to get that beautiful aggregate finish you see in the mags. To get a super nice polished surface you really need to wet sand with diamond pads.
The relief I molded into the counter will be home for cobalt blue tile that wraps aroound the whole oven. Unfortunately I didn' get finished before winter hit.
John
Here are some pics of my pour in place concrete counter. I spent several months reading up on the process and was convinced that the pour in place would not yield the appearance of form made tops because the nice colorful aggregaqte sinks in the wet mix to deep. With that in mind after troweling I added black, blue and white tumbled glass nuggets to the wet surface and tamped them down just into the top surface of my pour.
To get that top skim layer off and expose the glass I used a grinder with a diamond cup and for the polishing I used a Porter Cable R/O sander with 60-500 grid diamond pads. I applied water by hand as needed. I also used A GFI circuit for this process. As I had read the larg aggregate had settled to deep to see so I was very happy that I added the glass to the top surface. There was some aggregate present for polishing but it was very small and There was no way I was going to get that beautiful aggregate finish you see in the mags. To get a super nice polished surface you really need to wet sand with diamond pads.
The relief I molded into the counter will be home for cobalt blue tile that wraps aroound the whole oven. Unfortunately I didn' get finished before winter hit.
John
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