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#1 |
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Registered User
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What to use on floor?
Whats the preffered floor covering on bare concrete floors? I'm looking for something that'll take the plasma cutter and welding sparks. Is there such a thing?
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Undoing years of Toyota engineering one SAS at a time!! 2007 Yaris--1959 FJ25--www.yankeetoys.org |
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#2 |
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Attention Whore
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I have always painted mine with International 2 part epoxy paint. there are several tricks to acheiving a good finish.
1. cleaning, i pressure wash the floor and allow to dry for at least a day. 2. chemical prep. i scrub it down with lacqure thinner. 3. temp. MAKE SURE the concrete is at least 75 degrees before painting and does not drop below that until dry. ( i usually leave the heater on in the shop for several days prior to painting to make certain it is heated throughly) I find that the floor holds up for about 3 years before needing a fresh coat. my floors have been done this way for about 15 years. |
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2000
Member # 943
Location: Oregon
Posts: 1,786
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When I was in construction I worked on a jiffy lube building and in the last coat or second to last coat they sprinkled sand on the floor as they were painting for traction. Maybe something to consider since epoxied floors can be very slippery.
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#4 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2002
Member # 13395
Location: Canadia
Posts: 1,255
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Quote:
If you had a really straight nice slab to cover, why not put some industrial tile on it? Imagine how easy to clean that would be. Does anyone have experience with using tile on a garage floor? And not the plastic interlocking stuff, either. Something that would hold up to grinding, welding, etc. I guess if you were to drop something like a hammer on it it might break though, if it was hard enough. Just an idea. J-L
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JL. Trailer queens. Must be a west coast thing. |
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#5 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2000
Member # 943
Location: Oregon
Posts: 1,786
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Quote:
For me the main reason would be cost and I think tile would still be very slippery. Im just on plain ole concrete myself havent epoxied painted or anything fun yet. |
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#6 |
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I should be working
Join Date: Apr 2003
Member # 18829
Location: Broken Arrow
Posts: 282
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I know this is of little use to anyone with their shop already built, but when I build my shop I plan to have the floor finished with a ride-on troweling machine until it's got a mirror finish. That way I shouldn't have to worry about porosity soaking up oil etc and I won't ever have to worry about coatings flaking or having to be reapplied.
On an existing floor I would use industrial epoxy. If I remember the names of some stuff I'll post it. We use it all the time on new projects.
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Ride 'Em Cowboys ! |
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#7 |
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Dog is my co-pilot
Join Date: Nov 2002
Member # 15246
Location: Mohegan Lake, NY
Posts: 392
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Our warehouse floor is like this, and it's a skating rink when it's wet.
Andy |
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#8 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Member # 23262
Location: Talkeetna, Alaska
Posts: 806
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When our current shop was built they used a white pigment in the concrete and the floors are white all the way through and it helps with the lighting.
Gus
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The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. --Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903) |
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#9 |
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Pirate4x4 Addict!
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why coat the floors? I drop stuff all the time, weld on the floor, etc.. I can't imagine ANYTHING taking that abuse? Sure it looks good but for a metal shop?
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#10 |
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Ridge Runner
Join Date: Sep 2001
Member # 6920
Location: Amesbury, MA
Posts: 1,524
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I vote for the epoxy coating. At the shipyard that I work at, that is what we use on the floors and it withstands all sorts of abuse...welding, grinding, oil, alcohol, etc... You can wash, hose, buff as you see fit, or just let it be and repaint in another few years.
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#11 | |
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Rock God
Join Date: May 2000
Member # 908
Location: Pinole, CA
Posts: 2,089
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Quote:
Seriously good stuff, time consuming and expensive I'm told.
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I take my zuk out for walks. |
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#12 |
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Attention Whore
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we are pouring the slap for my new shop on monday and will put a polished finish on it. i was going to color it black but decided againt it since we will be filming some video stuff in it and need a brighter color.
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#13 | |
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Attention Whore
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Quote:
been welding, fabricating, driving forklifts and generally beating on my painted floors for years and it holds up great.
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#14 | |
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Rock God
Join Date: May 2001
Member # 4464
Location: Houston
Posts: 1,505
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Quote:
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#15 |
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Attention Whore
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actually you will probally get better adhesion with a brushed finish since the surface has more open pours for the paint to adhere to. with a smooth surface you have to be carfully to get the floor very clean to get the paint to stick and not peel
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#16 | |
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Pirate4x4 Addict!
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Quote:
I didn't realize it could hold up to some abuse, figured it was more for a show car garage.. How about someone make this thread worth something.. add some pics
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#17 | |
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Attention Whore
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Quote:
perty
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#18 |
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Pirate4x4 Addict!
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wow, hard to clean? Where did you get that stuff - Lotsa places are selling some epoxy kit in the ads now - pep boys or whatever..
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This Space for rent! |
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#19 |
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Attention Whore
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be carful with the crap the mass merchants sell ( home depot ) cause it is water based latex and does not hold up well. the good stuff is only sold at real paint stores. you want a two part epoxy with the it's gonna kill you warning labels on the can.
no it is not hard to clean. i just mop it once in awhile and if i really wanna get it shinny i will hit it with a floor buffer. |
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#20 | ||
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Web wheeler/welder
Join Date: Mar 2001
Member # 3547
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 6,216
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Camo you pussy - that's not a shop floor, that's a fawkin ballet studio THIS is what a real man's shop floor looks like !! I find the deep crevices add a satisfying challenge to trying to roll anything across the floor, particularly a floor jack masquerading as a tranny jack with a 203 doubler balanced precariously on it!
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#21 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2002
Member # 9287
Location: South Central, PA
Posts: 310
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Rust-o-leum has a floor epoxy that they call their "industrial epoxy" It's a true 2 part resin expoxy. I bought it at home depot has held up very well so far to 2 years of abuse. I weld, throw tools and about any part I can think of and it has only just scratched the surface...nothing down to the concrete. Rust-o also makes a 1 part water based epoxy which is junk.
The floor has to be cured for at least 30days for many epoxies and then you clean the floor with muratic acid or some such which you scrub on with a deck brush. Then rinse and epoxy. I am VERY glad I did this. Floor gets oily? out comes the mop and I clean it like the day I put it down. i would suggest adding a little bit of sand. as was said earlier, this stuff gets slicker that snot when wet.
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88 XJ 8"/36s/locked when I grow up - I don't want to be like you |
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#22 |
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Registered User
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Before everyone screamed it was junk, I bought 3-4 gallons of the Behr stuff from HD..
After brooming, washing, degreasing, acid-etching, and rinsing.. we primed... ![]() ![]() Then painted.. ![]() That was a year ago.. Haven't done much wrenching.. but oil wipes up easily.. and it held up to the sheetrock party.. ![]() And here's after we finished roughing in the wiring and air system, Corbond insulated the walls, 'rocked the ceiling and walls, taped, mudded, and put down two coats of White Walmart primer n' paint on the walls and ceiling. ![]()
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-Tom KE7VUX Last edited by tsm1mt; 06-15-2004 at 01:06 PM. |
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#23 |
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I should be working
Join Date: Apr 2003
Member # 18829
Location: Broken Arrow
Posts: 282
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For those of you with the sand/epoxy mix on the floor do you find it troublesome when rolling stuff across it or laying on it? I'd think I'd rather trade having wet traction for having a nice smooth surface.
Also, I guess part of it is climate you live in. In OK my garage would see a lot less wetness than a garage in the snowy north.
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Ride 'Em Cowboys ! |
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#24 | |
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Rock God
Join Date: May 2001
Member # 4406
Location: Denver
Posts: 2,238
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Quote:
![]() I think for a new pour though, the polished white concrete would be great.
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#25 |
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Well Done Man!
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I used the Rustolem shop paint, held up pretty good, but brake fluid ate large holes in it.
I am recosting it with the $$$$ stuff from the paint store
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Mark 71 Bronco. 42's and bolt on goats. |
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