Machine polish a kitchen worktop ?
Discussion
Strange question I know 🤔
I have an imitation corrian effect worktop ( standard worktop material) on the centre island in my kitchen , probably 10’ x 4’ with cutouts and in built drainer etc , so not a worktop that I can easily replace.
It is 10 years old now and has gathered the usual light scratching that is to be expected.
My question is if I bought a DA polisher do you guys who have some experience with these think it would remove some of the scratches ?
I have an imitation corrian effect worktop ( standard worktop material) on the centre island in my kitchen , probably 10’ x 4’ with cutouts and in built drainer etc , so not a worktop that I can easily replace.
It is 10 years old now and has gathered the usual light scratching that is to be expected.
My question is if I bought a DA polisher do you guys who have some experience with these think it would remove some of the scratches ?
I've used a DA on Slate recently. It was a natural slate hearth that I'd spilt cleaning chemicals on. Bit of googling gave me various grades of polishing pads that are hook and loop. Came up a treat. Took a while though. Probably much quicker using an orbital. Slate needs sealing, not familiar with Corian but you can gloss polish it anyway.
https://www.corian.com/IMG/pdf/k-25298-finishing-a...
https://www.corian.com/IMG/pdf/k-25298-finishing-a...
Edited by TimmyMallett on Monday 17th August 14:46
Depends how deep the scratches are. You might need to do a wet sanding first ( very fine wet/dry used wet) to remove enough material then polish back. Ordinary polishes might not be coarse enough to start but ok to finish.
I don’t know anything about that worktop material though.
A DA machine would be safer than a straight rotary as DA is gentler.
Try polishes first to test the effectiveness, fine then coarser. Finish with fine.
I don’t know anything about that worktop material though.
A DA machine would be safer than a straight rotary as DA is gentler.
Try polishes first to test the effectiveness, fine then coarser. Finish with fine.
Edited by sospan on Monday 17th August 21:30
Thanks guys.
What polishes do people use ? Only one I’ve ever used is T Cut.
I understand that there are different types of pads also, is it one to cut and one to polish ?
And any recommendations for a cheapest DA machine ?
Btw, it is just standard worktop material but is a fake stone / granite effect.
What polishes do people use ? Only one I’ve ever used is T Cut.
I understand that there are different types of pads also, is it one to cut and one to polish ?
And any recommendations for a cheapest DA machine ?
Btw, it is just standard worktop material but is a fake stone / granite effect.
We have Black Jewel Corian worktops and chose it for the fact it is a solid surface and can be sanded back and machine polished. 1200 wet and dry used wet with a drop of fairy liquid in the water to aid cutting and then machine polish with Farecla G3 followed by G10 brings it up a treat. Depending on how we feel it can be a satin/semi gloss finish or a wet glass gloss finish. Easy to polish the heavy wear areas to maintain an even look.
I'd be tempted to try polishing an area by hand first to see what results you get.
If you do go down the route of using a DA, make sure you cover the floor because you should use it wet (damp, not sodden) and it will fling polish around.
You are correct in that you use a harder pad for cutting and a softer pad for polishing and finishing.
I'd get a mild compound rather than using t-cut, there is plenty to choose from.
If you do go down the route of using a DA, make sure you cover the floor because you should use it wet (damp, not sodden) and it will fling polish around.
You are correct in that you use a harder pad for cutting and a softer pad for polishing and finishing.
I'd get a mild compound rather than using t-cut, there is plenty to choose from.
911gone said:
I'd be tempted to try polishing an area by hand first to see what results you get.
If you do go down the route of using a DA, make sure you cover the floor because you should use it wet (damp, not sodden) and it will fling polish around.
m.
This, and also you are creating a sludge of water, cutting compound, cutting disc and the surface you are abrading. It flings.If you do go down the route of using a DA, make sure you cover the floor because you should use it wet (damp, not sodden) and it will fling polish around.
m.
10' by 4' is a lot to do by hand and to get a consistent finish you'll probably need to do the lot.
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