NewShockerGuy
Well-known member
I asked in an earlier thread about butcher block tops for my two base cabinets.
Went to ikea last sunday and picked one up.. very pleased with it and very heavy.
I will take a picture when I get home to show you but currently the laminate top is 73" wide and 20" deep. This pretty much shows an overhand of about one inch all the way around the base cabinets which looks fine to me.
The top is only screwed in from the bottom so I can easily remove it here in the next couple days once I decide what I want to do on the butcher block top.
The ikea BB top is 72" wide and 25" deep. So when I put it on the cabinets there is an over hand in the front of about 5 inches. I'm very undecided on how this looks and was thinking about taking my circular saw and cutting off 4" in depth from the back and then attaching that piece vertically onto the workbench top making it have a back splash or looking like this:
I was wondering to those that had a backsplash like that on workbenches do you like it or no? Is it worth doing? The overhand looks a bit odd to me because it hangs off the front too much ... but my wife said if I had a stool it might be better because i could have a little work area being seated and not hit my legs right off the cabinets.. my garage isn't that big to have a workshop like that I was mainly going to use the table to put things on and work on but nothing major... The backsplash might be good so things don't fall behind the cabinet?
Also my thoughts on doing this. Put butcher block good face down. Use the freud 40 tooth finishing blade in my circular saw cut the 4" strip. Drill pilot holes in both and then screw down after putting a bead of wood glue on it. This may sound cheap but I really just don't want to waste any of the butcher block for spending about $140 on wood I'd prefer to use all of it..hahah
But looking at what ya'll think or recommend. This is going to be UP against the back wall of my garage no in an open space or anything like that. The thickness is about 1.5-2" for the entire bb top. So I would be in theory losing an inch of workspace, but I was going to push it back against the wall since the cabinets base piece doesnt' sit flush to the wall.. if that makes sense. IE: Moving the table top back further so it hits the wal IE: 22" in depth compared to 20, and the back splash would make it the same working area as the stock laminent top that is currently on the cabinets..
I will post pictures tonight with what I am talking about to help.
Thanks,
-Nigel
Went to ikea last sunday and picked one up.. very pleased with it and very heavy.
I will take a picture when I get home to show you but currently the laminate top is 73" wide and 20" deep. This pretty much shows an overhand of about one inch all the way around the base cabinets which looks fine to me.
The top is only screwed in from the bottom so I can easily remove it here in the next couple days once I decide what I want to do on the butcher block top.
The ikea BB top is 72" wide and 25" deep. So when I put it on the cabinets there is an over hand in the front of about 5 inches. I'm very undecided on how this looks and was thinking about taking my circular saw and cutting off 4" in depth from the back and then attaching that piece vertically onto the workbench top making it have a back splash or looking like this:
I was wondering to those that had a backsplash like that on workbenches do you like it or no? Is it worth doing? The overhand looks a bit odd to me because it hangs off the front too much ... but my wife said if I had a stool it might be better because i could have a little work area being seated and not hit my legs right off the cabinets.. my garage isn't that big to have a workshop like that I was mainly going to use the table to put things on and work on but nothing major... The backsplash might be good so things don't fall behind the cabinet?
Also my thoughts on doing this. Put butcher block good face down. Use the freud 40 tooth finishing blade in my circular saw cut the 4" strip. Drill pilot holes in both and then screw down after putting a bead of wood glue on it. This may sound cheap but I really just don't want to waste any of the butcher block for spending about $140 on wood I'd prefer to use all of it..hahah
But looking at what ya'll think or recommend. This is going to be UP against the back wall of my garage no in an open space or anything like that. The thickness is about 1.5-2" for the entire bb top. So I would be in theory losing an inch of workspace, but I was going to push it back against the wall since the cabinets base piece doesnt' sit flush to the wall.. if that makes sense. IE: Moving the table top back further so it hits the wal IE: 22" in depth compared to 20, and the back splash would make it the same working area as the stock laminent top that is currently on the cabinets..
I will post pictures tonight with what I am talking about to help.
Thanks,
-Nigel
