Requirements for Overhangs

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VIDEO TRANSCRIPT

Our baseline overhang when we have no special bar seating is roughly 1.5 inches.

Now we talked about earlier in our previous blog that inch and a half is our baseline. But because the cabinets are not straight, that could vary from 1.25 inches to 1.625 inches to 1.75 inches in different areas.

We're going to cut the rock, the granite, or the quartz straight. But the cabinets are not straight. And that's our baseline, whether it's over there in front of a pool and you don't want more than a inch and a half because you want access your actual drawer or whether it's over here where someone doesn't want bar seats because it intrudes into the walkway or into the space. Inch and a half goes anywhere where it's a normal overhang.

Now when we want bar seats, we want to eat there, we got to kick it up from inch and a half to at least eight inches. Now when we're on an island or a peninsula where we're all level and there's a ton of counter top going this way for support, then we can for sure go from 8 even to 12. In this case, this customer is doing 10 inches of overhang. That's the perfect magic number without any extra bracing. You have to separate islands and peninsulas where there's a lot of counter top surface area being weighted to the left or to the right of the overhang that makes it stable to be able to go to that amount.

Now if someone really, really wanted to make this a permanent table for whatever reason, they wanted to go 16 or 19 or 22 inches of overhang, they have to do one of two things. They have to actually build a table-leg extension wherever your endpoint is, put a column, a decorative table leg, probably a wood, sitting right here to carry that overhang. Then, they would have to connect it from point to point and then connect them all together like a table so they don't wobble, which is a lot of money for carpentry. You got to buy the materials and have it done before we can start templating.

If that's what you want, it's just a matter of money. It's not a matter of whether it can be done or not. It's a matter of money. Anything past 12 inches is excessive overhang and needs the next level of support for proper safety.

We're not against anything. We're all for what you want. We just want to lay the groundwork of what's immediate, what takes extra work and what takes extra money, so when you guys communicate with us, we can be properly prepared and ready to start work.
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It took me forever to find a video like this that answered a very specific question of mine so thank you

chelseacoral
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Not going to lie this video remembers me of Ryan from the office when he introduced wuphf

getback
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If 15” or 16” you can use a flat bar support.... may have to notch cabinet under flat bar.

premiercconstruction
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Typical overhang is 1.5" from the face of the cabinet box, not the face of the door/drawer.

williamk
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Nice information. Thanks for posting this!

janarearugs
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Great info, but what was with that weird floating L column at the end of the island?

CitSOLD
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That did NOT explain (show examples) what to do for counter tops exceeding 10". We are installing a 19" bar top and are trying to figure out what the corbel requirements would be.

billoleary
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You overhang an inch and a half from the door fronts? That seems like a big overhang! I go 1 1/2” from face frames.

jayishere
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You didn't mention the guidelines (which I think also become local building codes) that state this relative to overhang and also how level the granite must be:
(1) Cantilever shall be limited to (1) 6" (150 mm) for ¾" (20 mm)
thick countertops and 10” (250 mm) for 1¼" (30 mm)

countertops, but in no case may the cantilevered portion

represent more than 1/3 of the width of the countertop.

Cantilevered countertops exceeding these dimensions will

require corbelled supports beneath the stone.
(2) Cantilever shall be limited to 6" (150 mm) for ¾" (20 mm)

thick countertops and 10” (250 mm) for 1¼" (30 mm)

countertops, but in no case may the cantilevered portion

represent more than 1/3 of the width of the countertop.

Cantilevered countertops exceeding these dimensions will

require corbelled supports beneath the stone.

ralphhross
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I really want an overhang on my Island but It does not have one. I am considering getting just new countertop for the Island but not sure if the mismatched counters will bother me.

solitairemorales
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I have a small counter top that's is 12 inches. How much of an overhang is okay with brackets?

joinmycxlt
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You mentioned "...wanted to go 16 or 19 or 22 inches of overhang, they have to do one of two things..." What's the 2nd thing, corbels? I'm wanting to have a 19" overhang with 3CM granite that is 72" wide. Will 3 corbels be sufficient? If so, what is the recommended size? I'm thinking corbels that are 14-16" deep. Thoughts? Suggestions? Thanks.

mattc
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It's information I'm looking for! 👍 Thanks! 👍

LEX-rhjr
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Inch and half past the doors seems like a lot.

HonestAbe
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We’re not against anything, we just want that money. Got it.👍

KanimWhite
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What about an 18" overhang with a bowl sink on it.

elifire
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Dude, it's 1 1/2" from the cabinet frame, and when having 3/4" doors the overhang is 3/4". At most 1 3/4" from cabinet frame with 1" overhang from doors.

petemiller
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So, a 60" overhang is gonna need a couple 4x4's for legs. Cool...

Marco-Alexi