wood is good I'm just not much of a finish carpenter
, but shelves in the shop! I'm on it!!
I always like to see the talents that others have, Nice liquor cabinet!! Steve.
Jerry.
(09-27-2012, 04:39 PM)stevec Wrote: [ -> ]John, I love it!
It is a bit over engineered
But when you bump in to it getting out of the shower it will win
John
By request, it has a metal element, they're full of rebar and wire mesh and I did build the grinder.
I used marble chips from a nearby mine for the aggregate in the surface coat. Its white portland dyed black. The core is regular portland with gravel and fiberglass chop with water reducer to minimize shrinkage and the resulting cracks.
Built this for the rough grind. Used a 7 inch diamond grinding wheel, takes all that 2 hp motor will do to spin it.
The piece on the right is ground, from there I used a wet polisher with diamond pads, started at 80 grit and went to 3000.
And the finished product, sealed then polished with with Carnuba wax. Needs a coat of wax every year or two.
What a heck of a project!!
Is that your'e steel rack in the background in the first pic?
Thanks, not as big a project as it looks, hardest part was getting them into the kitchen.
Yes on the rack, am thinking of getting rid of it, can't afford to keep it full, would be nice to have the extra width in the bay.
Ok, yeah i hear ya on the steel prices, whoo! getting pricey!!
Nice job Greg. How did you derive the formula for using different mixes for the core vs. the finish coat? Trial and error or experience? It is amazing how much concrete weighs. My cast fireplace face ended up weighing nearly 600 pounds and I had to do some serious calculations to make sure the floor would hold it.
Tom
Tom, the core is a regular cement mix, one part portland and 5 parts gravel, the top layer is just portland for a binder and whatever decorative stone. Made one before using stucco stone.
That is absolutely gorgeous Greg!!