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personally I have to say that having worked on wood, stone and stainless that I abhor stainless. most of the counter that I have worked on that were stainless were very springy and soft and didn't give a sense of solidity. stone was awesome, but you do need to be aware breakage canbe an issue. wood and formica is where it is at. I love working on a nice thick wooden workspace. they look georgeous, and feel gerogeous. formica is nice as it cleans really well, but, even industrial grade will wear down. we have a couple of serious divots where we tamp our shots, as well as if it gets really constantly wet it can delaminate.
I wold vote for an over built wooden counter for your machine. 4-6 inches thick on some really beefy supports. going that thick allows for a really sturdy workspace as well as leaving room down the line for you to plane it down and keep using the same counter just like the old heavy duty butcher blocks.
Top access is a must, speed and functionality is your friend. What ever accommodates this is good. Plus if you have a lot of female baristas, and a lot of creepy customers, add some frequent bending over. Now you have a problem on your hands. I've had to enforce a ban on certain customers because their tendency to ooggle to the point of being sexually threatening to my female baristas. Keep this in mind in the placement of any type of milk cooler.
chris ganger said:personally I have to say that having worked on wood, stone and stainless that I abhor stainless. most of the counter that I have worked on that were stainless were very springy and soft and didn't give a sense of solidity. stone was awesome, but you do need to be aware breakage canbe an issue. wood and formica is where it is at. I love working on a nice thick wooden workspace. they look georgeous, and feel gerogeous. formica is nice as it cleans really well, but, even industrial grade will wear down. we have a couple of serious divots where we tamp our shots, as well as if it gets really constantly wet it can delaminate.
I wold vote for an over built wooden counter for your machine. 4-6 inches thick on some really beefy supports. going that thick allows for a really sturdy workspace as well as leaving room down the line for you to plane it down and keep using the same counter just like the old heavy duty butcher blocks.
Sweet. Thank you guys so much for your input. Speaking of counters and work space...what do you guys think is the most ideal location for your milk fridges? under the counter or off to the side? i know that it all depends on how your bar is laid out, but if you had a clean slate to work with, what would you prefer?
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