| the key is the yellow label on the bucket. this was a kit for a certain number of square inches, everything in the bucket for $60. somebody is probably making $30 pure profit on it, but why would you want to buy a 90 pound bag of portland cement, a bag or two of silica sand, and a quart or two of admixture for using a third of the material as the alternative?
sig: if this is a new economy, how come they still want my old-fashioned money?
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| | | Posts: 4689 | Location: North Burbs, MN | Registered: Mar 14, 2007 |  
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| Concrete counter-top seems very easy but I think it has very short life because of stains and water damages and it is very expensive as well. |
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| Concrete tops seem to be all the rage on TV. But in real life not so. Just my opinion. It looks like it is popular for those clueless twits of hosts to champion in order to fill those 22 minutes.
"Why isn't everyday Earth Day ?"
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| | | Posts: 918 | Location: Central Pennsylvania | Registered: Jun 02, 2010 |  
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| for what you're spending, why not use a nice quartz? I think in terms of spec-40 because I'm old and tired and cheap, and I don't plan on redoing everything in 5 or 10 year increments. concrete counters? let's say the jury has convicted; the same jury that threw the book at OSB as decorative flooring.
sig: if this is a new economy, how come they still want my old-fashioned money?
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| | | Posts: 4689 | Location: North Burbs, MN | Registered: Mar 14, 2007 |  
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