Not to crash your video , but there is another way that is quick and zero damage to wall. Putty knife and heat gun is all you need. Metal is a conductor of heat. Heat up your putty knife and it will cut through the caulking and adhesive like butter and separate the granite backsplash from the wall with zero damage. Slightly heat up the remaining adhesive and scrap it off the wall this a putty knife. Then use a sanding sponge to sand over the areas where the adhesive was.
Awesome tip! I bought the cheapest heat gun I could find at Home Depot (Wagner Furnu 300) and a metal scraper, heated up the backsplash for about 10 minutes - then the metal scraper. It worked amazingly, done in about an hour - minimal damage to drywall.
I commented here before and wanted to update. We took off our piece of granite of using your demonstration and it totally worked! No damage to the wall or granite counter top! Now I will subway tile my kitchen backsplash and I’m so excited! Thanks again for your video!
Wow thank you so much! I was upset that they installed this sad excuse for a backsplash in my kitchen but now I feel better knowing it can be removed fairly easily for a full tile backsplash.
This works like a charm and is almost hilariously easy. I found a plastic wedge just lying in the road and used it to complete this project. We had 6 short pieces and one long piece about 7-8 feet long. I finished the whole thing in like 20 minutes, and like 16 minutes of it was just waiting for the glue to heat up. For the smaller pieces, I was able to get them down after just waiting for a minute. Let it sit a bit longer on the huge piece, but it came down just as easily. Fantastic video.
Thank you for posting this! I have 2 small sections of backsplash that I need to remove due to a different shaped stove, and I was really worried this would be a difficult project, but I am excited to remove them myself! Thanks again!
Thank you for sharing this! I have been scared to attempt to take mine off but now I’m doing it! Can’t wait to have my backsplash up in my kitchen. Thanks again!
Wow, thanks for this. We have black granite, which isn't horrible, but that big clunky 4" backsplash piece is. I've been thinking that if I can remove that entirely and install new backsplash (the current is white tile) we can really give the kitchen new life without replacing the countertops, which can cost a small fortune. So many thanks.
@@kayladaggett6474 same here, I just moved into a home with black granite and I came from a home with a white countertop….I can not get used to the darkness…I’d like to try this
Thank you this was so helpful because I have a long piece that I need to remove Around my sink area I took the two short pieces of over by the stove which she did some damage to the wall so I was going to give up on the sink side. But now after watching your video I am going to go ahead and take it off.
This method worked for me too, although I'm not sure the heat is need. One more suggestion, when pulling the existing back splash off the wall put something to cushion its drop. In my case it was my thumb (ouch).
This method worked perfectly. Thank you! We removed about 35 feet of backsplash that looked very similar to this. We had no mess and no damage other than some of very long pieces breaking. I was even able to save some long pieces that did not crack. Although, I don't know what I'm going to do with them or if there is a market for used granite backsplash pieces.
I pulled one of these recently from the far end because it had a huge mirror liquid nailed right above it basically on top of the granite piece. I pried it out with a pry bar very gently and it released at that end, this was after cutting through silicone at top and bottom. After that I pulled with my fingers literally three pulling outward. It started to come almost halfway down and the sucker just crumbles in front of where it was still stuck to the wall. I couldn't believe it that it would break that easily. I've pulled these before and handled granite many times and thought the pressure I put there wasn't near enough to do this and it was on a job that needed the vanity removed for water damage behind it. The customers were not happy but I know I can make the crack dissappear with a little finesse. I honestly think it had to have already been damaged but could be wrong regardless now it's my problem. I never make mistakes like this but luckily the customers are reasonable of the situation. Has anyone ever had granite break this easily on them??
Most granite countertops these days are put together using silicone as the bonding agent.This will include bonding and shimming to the cabinets. Heat will have no impact. If the backsplash has been bonded to the countertop using silicone you run the risk of damaging the countertop. This of course depends on the type of granite installed but all natural material has fracture lines. In my case I removed a small section of backsplash just 18" at most, in a concealed area. The natural fracture line pulled an additional inch of counter beyond the backsplash. Luckily I was able to epoxy the fracture line back together, Silicone back to the wall and then apply my tile.
If you look carefully this backsplash was bonded with silicone. The silicone itself did not melt. But the heat apparently made it easy to pull the silicone away from the wall.
@@markcarey5673 No, the backsplash in this video was glued to the drywall with construction adhesive which does soften and reactivate when heated. The backsplash was sealed to the countertop with a bead of silicon which the video guy just tore.
Followed your instructions and it worked very well, but the grantie countertop is damaged behind the backsplash with large chunks missing. They are too large and will show with the thinner subway tile.. what should I do?
Any idea how much it would cost to hire someone to do this? I got a quote of $250 to $300 for 3 sizes if the one you showed. I was shocked it would be that much.
Does that heater give more heat than a hair blow dryer? Also how do you remove the remaining silicone or glue left on the countertop without damaging the counter?
The tutorial alone deserves a thumbs up but the DMB background music takes this to God tier.
Not to crash your video , but there is another way that is quick and zero damage to wall. Putty knife and heat gun is all you need. Metal is a conductor of heat. Heat up your putty knife and it will cut through the caulking and adhesive like butter and separate the granite backsplash from the wall with zero damage. Slightly heat up the remaining adhesive and scrap it off the wall this a putty knife. Then use a sanding sponge to sand over the areas where the adhesive was.
Great idea.
Why use a hear gun when you got a stove!!!
Awesome tip! I bought the cheapest heat gun I could find at Home Depot (Wagner Furnu 300) and a metal scraper, heated up the backsplash for about 10 minutes - then the metal scraper. It worked amazingly, done in about an hour - minimal damage to drywall.
Awesome idea! Thanks to both of you
I commented here before and wanted to update. We took off our piece of granite of using your demonstration and it totally worked! No damage to the wall or granite counter top! Now I will subway tile my kitchen backsplash and I’m so excited! Thanks again for your video!
Nice job!! Hope the new subway tiles look awesome!
Wow thank you so much! I was upset that they installed this sad excuse for a backsplash in my kitchen but now I feel better knowing it can be removed fairly easily for a full tile backsplash.
Just pulled off all the quartz backsplash in my laundry room so I can lay tile. Thank you for the post!!!
This works like a charm and is almost hilariously easy. I found a plastic wedge just lying in the road and used it to complete this project. We had 6 short pieces and one long piece about 7-8 feet long. I finished the whole thing in like 20 minutes, and like 16 minutes of it was just waiting for the glue to heat up. For the smaller pieces, I was able to get them down after just waiting for a minute. Let it sit a bit longer on the huge piece, but it came down just as easily.
Fantastic video.
Dude....I'm so relieved!!! Wow thank you so much for posting this!!!
Thank you for posting this! I have 2 small sections of backsplash that I need to remove due to a different shaped stove, and I was really worried this would be a difficult project, but I am excited to remove them myself! Thanks again!
Thank you for sharing this! I have been scared to attempt to take mine off but now I’m doing it! Can’t wait to have my backsplash up in my kitchen. Thanks again!
Good Luck, hope it goes well.
Thanks for the video. My husband is in for a surprise! Hope I don’t mess up 😂
Worked like a charm! Excellent and easy! Thanks!
Worked perfectly! Thank you!
Omgosh!! I didn’t know it was that easy!! Thank you so much for this info!!
Wow, thanks for this. We have black granite, which isn't horrible, but that big clunky 4" backsplash piece is. I've been thinking that if I can remove that entirely and install new backsplash (the current is white tile) we can really give the kitchen new life without replacing the countertops, which can cost a small fortune. So many thanks.
This is exactly what I’m looking to do for our black granite. It’s just too dark. Did you end up trying this, and how did it turn out?
@@kayladaggett6474 same here, I just moved into a home with black granite and I came from a home with a white countertop….I can not get used to the darkness…I’d like to try this
Just what I was looking for! Thanks
Thank you this was so helpful because I have a long piece that I need to remove Around my sink area I took the two short pieces of over by the stove which she did some damage to the wall so I was going to give up on the sink side. But now after watching your video I am going to go ahead and take it off.
longer time ago I’m looking for this job
Thanks, thanks, thanks
Worked very well
Thank you
Awesome thanks looking to do this too add tile backslash. How would you recommend removing the leftover silicone from the countertop?
This Saved me!
This method worked for me too, although I'm not sure the heat is need. One more suggestion, when pulling the existing back splash off the wall put something to cushion its drop. In my case it was my thumb (ouch).
TY!
Genius! Heat gun seemed to help too. Hopefully mine goes as smoothly 🤣
This method worked perfectly. Thank you! We removed about 35 feet of backsplash that looked very similar to this. We had no mess and no damage other than some of very long pieces breaking. I was even able to save some long pieces that did not crack. Although, I don't know what I'm going to do with them or if there is a market for used granite backsplash pieces.
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Glad it helped!
I pulled one of these recently from the far end because it had a huge mirror liquid nailed right above it basically on top of the granite piece. I pried it out with a pry bar very gently and it released at that end, this was after cutting through silicone at top and bottom. After that I pulled with my fingers literally three pulling outward. It started to come almost halfway down and the sucker just crumbles in front of where it was still stuck to the wall. I couldn't believe it that it would break that easily. I've pulled these before and handled granite many times and thought the pressure I put there wasn't near enough to do this and it was on a job that needed the vanity removed for water damage behind it. The customers were not happy but I know I can make the crack dissappear with a little finesse. I honestly think it had to have already been damaged but could be wrong regardless now it's my problem. I never make mistakes like this but luckily the customers are reasonable of the situation. Has anyone ever had granite break this easily on them??
Can’t believe no one has commented that he lucked out because the person originally installing it didn’t use very much glue!!
We have this granite at our home, what backsplash did you go with? Need ideas for Santa Cecilia Granite counters. Thanks
I have a granite backspalash from the conuntertop all the way below my cabinet. How do I remove the big block of granite?
You have the same granite that we have. What kind of backsplash did you choose?
Most granite countertops these days are put together using silicone as the bonding agent.This will include bonding and shimming to the cabinets. Heat will have no impact. If the backsplash has been bonded to the countertop using silicone you run the risk of damaging the countertop. This of course depends on the type of granite installed but all natural material has fracture lines. In my case I removed a small section of backsplash just 18" at most, in a concealed area. The natural fracture line pulled an additional inch of counter beyond the backsplash. Luckily I was able to epoxy the fracture line back together, Silicone back to the wall and then apply my tile.
If you look carefully this backsplash was bonded with silicone. The silicone itself did not melt. But the heat apparently made it easy to pull the silicone away from the wall.
@@markcarey5673 No, the backsplash in this video was glued to the drywall with construction adhesive which does soften and reactivate when heated. The backsplash was sealed to the countertop with a bead of silicon which the video guy just tore.
Is the process the same for Corian?
Followed your instructions and it worked very well, but the grantie countertop is damaged behind the backsplash with large chunks missing. They are too large and will show with the thinner subway tile.. what should I do?
That looks so easy, thank you!
You're welcome
Any idea how much it would cost to hire someone to do this? I got a quote of $250 to $300 for 3 sizes if the one you showed. I was shocked it would be that much.
What did the contractor use to hold the smaller trim granite piece to the bottom countertop?
How to remove araldite from granite or marble surface
How do you get rid of the discoloration of the existing granite?
What wattage was the heat gun?
Wow! I could do this myself. Would I create enough heat from my hair dryer?
Do you mean Hair Dryer? I am not sure, best to have the right tools for the job to go smoothly.
Cool. I’ll give it the ol’ college try.
Can you do this with Quartz?
Does that heater give more heat than a hair blow dryer? Also how do you remove the remaining silicone or glue left on the countertop without damaging the counter?
That is a heat gun. It gets VERY hot! Try scraping the residual adhesive with a single edge razor blade and some liquid Goof Off.
Nice
Just like that :), thanks.
You're welcome!!
فكرة رائعة
God idea
Would this work the same with Zodiaq quartz? Thanks for a really helpful video!
100%…I have seen others remove Quartz with the same process.
Where exactly is the heat supposed to be directed 🤔. At the backsplash? The caulking??
Does this method work with butcher block?
Was the dryer to heat the surface? Does it soften the glue?
Exactly, it softens the glue for easier removal and less likely to destroy the drywall.
What do you have on the bottom of your heat gun?
That is a stand. He used it appropriately instead of having to hold it. You can get a less expensive but very good heat gun from Harbor Freight.
Can I use a hair dryer if I don’t have a heat gun??
No, a hair dryer won't heat enough. Check Harbor Freight for a good, inexpensive heat gun and DON'T TRY TO DRY YOUR HAIR WITH IT!!!
@@thomasdragosr.841 thanks!! I didn’t realize how inexpensive they are.
Well they only glued it in 3 globs
How did you remove the glue left on the counter after removing the backsplash.
razor blade and lemon oil...took it off nicely.
Exactly what I was going to ask. Glad there's an answer
2 inch backsplash? That’s a border
Does this technique work with quartz countertop?
I'd like to know as well.
I have done very similar with Woodglut designs.
BTW. Music HAS to go!!!!
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