I am tired of struggling with my not so flat building table . It is sturdy but not exactly flat. basically a butcher block top on four legs. 36"x60" about .080" dip in middle.
If it's wood, I would be sorely tempted to try to true it up with sandpaper. .080 is pretty crooked, so find the high points and knock them down with a belt sander, then when it's close, straighten it up with a rigid sanding block (mine for this purpose is made of a 2x4) and coarse paper. Keep checking, and sanding down the high points. Once you get it in .020 range, it will be pretty easy to even it all up with careful sanding. It's pointless to do a lot better than about .015-.020 - it won't be stable over time any better than that.
I do this every 5 years or so. I have what amounts to a butcher-block table (with gaps to let the air circulate) and they tend to move around a bit from time to time.
I use a piece of 2'x4'x3/4" hard-finish high density pressboard for my table top. It can be trued up nicely, you can cut on it and then clean it up by sanding, and it's so cheap you can just toss it when it gets too dingy.
Brett