BTL-A4
Well-known member
I'm making my son a potting bench. I'm looking for suggestions for a top. The top is about 18" x 36", with a small lip around the back and sides. Most of what I've seen in my research were wood ones with a wood top that were sealed with Danish Oil or spar varnish of some sort
Some of my more rational, realistic thoughts so far:
-Wood: I have some oak that might work, but it needs to be sealed. I'm thinking Danish Oil, since I have some.
-Wood: I have some 2x4's I can glue together to make a cheap butcher block style top. I'd seal it with Danish Oil, then spray it with a clear paint to seal it some more.
-Plastic: melamine would be nice, but it's pricey and I'm concerned it will warp in the sun.
-Find a kitchen countertop used and cut it to fit. These are usually some sort of plastic over particle board, and when water gets in the particle board, the table is ruined.
-Use whatever I have and replace it when it gets ruined. For example, I have some plywood I could seal and use.
Anyone got any other thoughts, comments or ideas?
Here's a rough draft idea (the lip is not shown). The shelves will probably be some sort of perforated metal, not wood as shown, unless someone suggests something that has to be bought in a big enough sheet that I'd have enough to make shelves as well as the top. The structural pieces (shown in green) are 1.5" square steel tube that I will weld and paint.

Some of my more rational, realistic thoughts so far:
-Wood: I have some oak that might work, but it needs to be sealed. I'm thinking Danish Oil, since I have some.
-Wood: I have some 2x4's I can glue together to make a cheap butcher block style top. I'd seal it with Danish Oil, then spray it with a clear paint to seal it some more.
-Plastic: melamine would be nice, but it's pricey and I'm concerned it will warp in the sun.
-Find a kitchen countertop used and cut it to fit. These are usually some sort of plastic over particle board, and when water gets in the particle board, the table is ruined.
-Use whatever I have and replace it when it gets ruined. For example, I have some plywood I could seal and use.
Anyone got any other thoughts, comments or ideas?
Here's a rough draft idea (the lip is not shown). The shelves will probably be some sort of perforated metal, not wood as shown, unless someone suggests something that has to be bought in a big enough sheet that I'd have enough to make shelves as well as the top. The structural pieces (shown in green) are 1.5" square steel tube that I will weld and paint.









