All my cupboards will be most likely be made out of maple veneer plywood with a 1 1/2" custom Concrete countertop or I may use phenolic resin or butcher block for my top I am still undecided there. It will utilize the port hole garbage idea brought up earlier aswell as have undercabinet lighting and lighting inside the cabinets if needed. I will also have alot of plug ins at back of top aswell as some mounted in the front of the cabinets. I will also have a water fill for my SS tumbler and ultra sonic cleaners aswell as a small drain (hopefully if I can rig it up). That is my plan right now and Once I design it on computer I will post pictures of it during it's progress
All my cupboards will be most likely be made out of maple veneer plywood with a 1 1/2" custom Concrete countertop or I may use phenolic resin or butcher block for my top I am still undecided...
Concrete is a bad idea...
Only negative thing with concrete top is if you drop a die, rotor or other parts, it can put a ding or possibly damage them whereas a wood counter would not.
You can do lots with concrete and you probably have some neat ideas about it. I like butcher block though (Especially if the wood has lots of contrast) it has a softer, warmer, quieter feel to it.
My tops I can hit with a sledge hamer without cracking or chipping when mounted properly
I meant damaging the parts, not the countertop.
Ah That's a possibility I think I will probably go with a maple/bloodwood top in 3 or 4 inch alternating pieces
Please give me a reason I own a decorative Concrete company and I'm having trouble seeing how it wouldn't be a perfect top other then difficult to mount to
I can give you lots of reasons... damaging dies and brass, difficulty in mounting equipment, difficulty in customizing the surface area, it will be noisy (you will see how often you are banging and tapping on your reloading bench counter) and while you might be able to hit it with a sledgehammer concrete has a weakness in the torque department... you will be mounting your presses on the edge of the counter and making endless and repeated torquing motions to a surface that has had its integrity Compromised by the holes you drilled to mount the press... I would bet a lot of money that it will fail in short order... even if you back it with an extended steel plate washer to distribute the pressure.
Looks like a winter bonfire to me!!!!!!!



























