Cutting granite worktops

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Cutting granite worktops

Home Forums Workshop Tools and Tooling Cutting granite worktops

Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
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  • #17492
    Ian Parkin
    Participant
      @ianparkin39383
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      #162348
      Ian Parkin
      Participant
        @ianparkin39383

        If I was to obtain some old granite kitchen worktops how would I cut them to my sizes to cover my worktops in my workshop?

        Is there any tool that will make it easy?

        I have most types of saws, a stihl saw, wet tile saw table,

        has anyone done it?

        Ian

        #162349
        JasonB
        Moderator
          @jasonb

          Diamond blade in a 115mm or 225mm electric grinder or 12" one in your Stihl will all do it quite quickly a tile saw will be slow and hard to balance a big slab ontop of. The small grinder is the usual way to trim granite upstands to length on site, the rest should have been cut to template but again the small grinder can adjust them to fit.

           

          J

          Edited By JasonB on 01/09/2014 14:02:22

          #162353
          Oompa Lumpa
          Participant
            @oompalumpa34302
            Posted by JasonB on 01/09/2014 14:01:05:

            Diamond blade in your Stihl will all do it quite quickly

            J

            Edited By JasonB on 01/09/2014 14:02:22

            This.

            Diamond 12" blades aren't that dear anymore. I let the hosepipe run down the cut last time as it stops the dust.

            graham.

            #162374
            roofer
            Participant
              @roofer

              Diamond tipped blade in a wood cutting skill saw type maching…you will have to make a spacer up for the saw to blade spindle as they never match, but believe me its a lot more controllable than free hand in a Stihl sawwink 2

              #162375
              Oompa Lumpa
              Participant
                @oompalumpa34302
                Posted by roofer on 01/09/2014 18:35:41:

                Diamond tipped blade in a wood cutting skill saw type maching…you will have to make a spacer up for the saw to blade spindle as they never match, but believe me its a lot more controllable than free hand in a Stihl sawwink 2

                I find it useful to clamp a wood lat on the line you want to cut down and this helps lots to keep the line straight. But you are right, freehand can end up all over the place.

                graham.

                (yes, I know the wood can damage the diamond of the blade but so far mine works just fine, no lasting ill effects)

                #162376
                roofer
                Participant
                  @roofer
                  Posted by Oompa Lumpa on 01/09/2014 18:41:54:

                  Posted by roofer on 01/09/2014 18:35:41:

                  Diamond tipped blade in a wood cutting skill saw type maching…you will have to make a spacer up for the saw to blade spindle as they never match, but believe me its a lot more controllable than free hand in a Stihl sawwink 2

                  I find it useful to clamp a wood lat on the line you want to cut down and this helps lots to keep the line straight. But you are right, freehand can end up all over the place.

                  graham.

                  (yes, I know the wood can damage the diamond of the blade but so far mine works just fine, no lasting ill effects)

                  yea we use them taking roofs apart as hitting nails has no ill effects unlike TCT blades

                  #162381
                  Peter Tucker
                  Participant
                    @petertucker86088

                    Hi Ian,

                    A water jet cutter is the thing (Iv'e seen it on telly).

                    Peter.

                    #162407
                    JimmieS
                    Participant
                      @jimmies

                      Hi Ian

                      Ask a real monumental mason for a price. I found it much cheaper and easier than doing it myself. By monumental mason I mean someone who makes the stones, not just sells them.

                      Jim

                      #162467
                      Neil Wyatt
                      Moderator
                        @neilwyatt

                        Is it solid granite or epoxy composite? You can cut the latter with a hacksaw (if you are foolish enough to want to).

                        I cut a 'surface plate' from composite using a diamond wheel. It was (almost) like a knife through butter, but it was too easy and I over did it and burnt out the angle grinder. On the plus side I recycled all the bearings and used the nice spiral bevel gears in my shunter…

                        Neil

                        #162499
                        john fletcher 1
                        Participant
                          @johnfletcher1

                          Neil, I like your idea about using the gears from an angle grinder for use on a shunter. I thought about using them as a horizontal drive for my milling machine, but just changed my mine after reading about your idea. I had two scrap ones given me last week.Ted

                          #162503
                          Neil Wyatt
                          Moderator
                            @neilwyatt

                            Ted,

                            Do both – replacement sets cost about £5 on ebay! A startling example of how a mass-produced item is a tiny fraction of the cost of a 'special'.

                            Neil

                            #162540
                            john jennings 1
                            Participant
                              @johnjennings1

                              OK, so it is possible to cut " granite" sheet in the home workshop particularly so if the material is a loaded plastic composite. I am less clear about is why one would want to use the material in the first place. Certainly real granite would add weight ( and stiffness) to a bench but might also add to problems coping with the weight of machinery and its desire to migrate to Australia by the direct route (from UK that is). It is also hard and cold with a poor bounce index. The composite material may have less problem with hardness and be a tad flexible but the "plastic" bit may not like all the oily messy stuff that we slop round our workshops.

                              A bit puzzled

                              John

                              #162584
                              Neil Wyatt
                              Moderator
                                @neilwyatt

                                It makes great 'hobby-standard' surface plates.

                                The filler is either epoxy or polyester based so it should stand up to most workshop abuse.

                                The real question is why use this stuff in the kitchen?

                                Neil

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