unpopular
Been spending a lot of time on here!
I recently bought my first house and have been busy getting things to our liking. It's a classic, modest home built in 1942 with a lot of midcentury charm we're keeping, so the bead board backsplash in the kitchen is staying, just with a coat of bright red paint and a few coats of gloss poly.
However, we would like to install a stainless backsplash behind the range so it's easier to clean up grease and splatter, and I'd like to do this the "right way" by removing the backsplash in this area so that it sits flush. I don't want to remove the entire existing backsplash, so I am thinking I'd take a 5" cordless circular saw, set the cut depth to 1/4" and cut the beadboard section while it's still attached to the wall, then remove only the offending section behind the stove.
Is this the right tool for this job?
However, we would like to install a stainless backsplash behind the range so it's easier to clean up grease and splatter, and I'd like to do this the "right way" by removing the backsplash in this area so that it sits flush. I don't want to remove the entire existing backsplash, so I am thinking I'd take a 5" cordless circular saw, set the cut depth to 1/4" and cut the beadboard section while it's still attached to the wall, then remove only the offending section behind the stove.
Is this the right tool for this job?