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Built-in Oven Into Concrete&tile Countertop

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I am asking my contractor to build a kitchen countertop and undercounter entirely of concrete and tiles (instead of wood).

1) Is it easy to install a built-in oven into a concrete and tile undercounter?

2) Will the heat from the built-in oven crack the concrete and tiles?

3) What shall I look out for when installing the oven into the concrete and tile undercounter?

 

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I am asking my contractor to build a kitchen countertop and undercounter entirely of concrete and tiles (instead of wood).

1) Is it easy to install a built-in oven into a concrete and tile undercounter?

2) Will the heat from the built-in oven crack the concrete and tiles?

3) What shall I look out for when installing the oven into the concrete and tile undercounter?

Why look for trouble?

- Installation is easy, just "slot in" the oven into the cage. Power cable entry from behind.

- Problem is the heat generated ! The "six" sides of the oven are pretty hot.

- Tiles will crack after some hot/cool cycles, over the time.

Edited by bepgof
 

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Thanks for your response! My architect said that high grade cement and heavy duty homogeneous tiles won't crack. What do you think?

"High grade" in cohesion (bonding force between 2 different material) force? - Epoxy glue so far is the best for bonding.

All homogenous tiles have been "heat treated". The tensile strength is pretty weak, layman called "fragile".

If u "must" put oven within the cemented cage, "season" the cage first by blowing air to "burn in" , making cement dry and some cracks (patch up the cracks) then apply tile externally and blow air to see if tiles still "stick" to cement or crack together with cement.

I lived in Kampong when I was young and the stove (burn by wood) made of cement and with ceramic tiles on walls. All tiles had fine cracks.

Edited by bepgof
 

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"High grade" in cohesion (bonding force between 2 different material) force? - Epoxy glue so far is the best for bonding.

All homogenous tiles have been "heat treated". The tensile strength is pretty weak, layman called "fragile".

If u "must" put oven within the cemented cage, "season" the cage first by blowing air to "burn in" , making cement dry and some cracks (patch up the cracks) then apply tile externally and blow air to see if tiles still "stick" to cement or crack together with cement.

I lived in Kampong when I was young and the stove (burn by wood) made of cement and with ceramic tiles on walls. All tiles had fine cracks.

You mean like... heat stress it first?

 

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You mean like... heat stress it first?

Yes, burn in the cage first. Or call "temperature-rise test".

The contraction & expansion forces are terriblly great, can bend metal.

Edited by bepgof
 

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