Garage Floor Epoxy

isuno1fan

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Mar 30, 2006
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Clive, Iowa
Anyone on here covered their garage floor with that epoxy/paint? Thinking about doing it and wondered if it was worth the investment?

Pros/Cons?

It really looks nice and clean...wondered about drawbacks?
 
It is on my list of things to to this summer. I have quite a few friends that have it and they love it. I don't think I have ever heard any of them complain about it.
 
I've used it a few times...garages and basements. It looks great and gives a little extra traction while sealing and protecting basically, I have no complaints what so ever.
 
Don't do it. Everytime you go to your garage you'll find a strange guy laying on the floor, looking for something. Same goes for Fabreezing your carpet. :plaugh:
 
Anyone on here covered their garage floor with that epoxy/paint? Thinking about doing it and wondered if it was worth the investment?

Pros/Cons?

It really looks nice and clean...wondered about drawbacks?

I don't know of any drawbacks besides the cost. I think it was about $130 for me to do a 3 car garage (3 kits).

Here are the directions I had on the other post.



I use the RustOleum kits you can buy at Lowes/Home Depot. 1 kit can do a 1 car garage. This is the second garage that I've used the kits. The first time I went with gray and this time I went with tan. I think I prefer the gray but that's personal preference.

#1 Both times I did it the floors were pretty new so there were no big stains. The kit includes a mixture that you put on the floor before applying the paint.

#2 After using the cleaning mixture fill in al your expansion joints/cracks. This is something I didn't do the first time and it was the one area where I had slight problems. If you don't fill in those cracks then salt/sand get in the cracks and the paint is more likely to come up.

#3 I use a paint roller with a 3-4 foot extension and then just rollit on. Each kit contains one big bag of the sprinkles. I break that bag into 4 ziplocs.

#4 For each stall I then break it up into 4 sections that I work with one at a time. I paint a section and then scatter one of the 4 ziplocs. Then I move onto section #2 and do the same until I'm finished with that stall. Expansion joints can be a good marker of how to break each stall into 4 sections.

#5 Let it dry. I don't think I walked on it for at least a day and I didn't park on it for 3-4 days. The directions will tell you how long to wait.


Another thing that I just remembered. I put painters tape along all the drywall as well as where the garage door ends, so that you have a straight line.

As far as other kits, there may be better/other ones out there but these have worked good for me and the paint still looks good.

Here are a few pics after 3 years. I also show how I filled in the cracks.


IMG_1581.jpg
 
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Appreciate the help! Not sure if I'm going to do it myself or hire it out as I've never done it and want to make sure the floor is properly cleaned and cracks filled to avoid down the road issues.
 
I put is on basement floor of a rental own. It was flooded (located in Cedar Rapids) last summer and I was worried about floor being clean enough. I power wased and then let it dry good before applying. Seems to be holding up well.
 
My house is about 15 years old and the floor of my garage has some "pitting" or spalling from winter freezing and ice.

Does anybody know of a good way to "float" those areas before applying the epoxy?
 
Appreciate the help! Not sure if I'm going to do it myself or hire it out as I've never done it and want to make sure the floor is properly cleaned and cracks filled to avoid down the road issues.


I'm not real handy and I've done it twice. Be prepared to pay a lot for someone else to do it. My co-worker just bought a new house and they we're quoted $1,000 for a 3 car garage.
 
I'm not real handy and I've done it twice. Be prepared to pay a lot for someone else to do it. My co-worker just bought a new house and they we're quoted $1,000 for a 3 car garage.

You aren't kidding. I just called Absolute Garage here in DSM and was quoted either $3.50/sqft or $4.50/sqft depending on a couple different application techniques.
 
#2 After using the cleaning mixture fill in al your expansion joints/cracks. This is something I didn't do the first time and it was the one area where I had slight problems. If you don't fill in those cracks then salt/sand get in the cracks and the paint is more likely to come up.

What do you use to fill the cracks with?

Phil McCracken:wink:
 
So I've been thinking about this for my garage floor also. What I was wondering, is if there is a problem of the expansion joints between the concrete slabs. I have lower-garage (basement) directly underneath my garage. Because of this the floor consists of huge slabs with some sort of squishy filler between them (some sort of caulking?). This isn't quite water tight, so I have ended up with some (salty) water coming through into the lower area. If I epoxied the first floor, would it be water tight and not crack over the joints?
 
#2 After using the cleaning mixture fill in al your expansion joints/cracks. This is something I didn't do the first time and it was the one area where I had slight problems. If you don't fill in those cracks then salt/sand get in the cracks and the paint is more likely to come up.

What do you use to fill the cracks with?

Phil McCracken:wink:

Lowes/HD both have caulk for cement. I did this a few days before.
 
So I've been thinking about this for my garage floor also. What I was wondering, is if there is a problem of the expansion joints between the concrete slabs. I have lower-garage (basement) directly underneath my garage. Because of this the floor consists of huge slabs with some sort of squishy filler between them (some sort of caulking?). This isn't quite water tight, so I have ended up with some (salty) water coming through into the lower area. If I epoxied the first floor, would it be water tight and not crack over the joints?

I don't know about this one. I would make sure that caulk is filled in enough where there are no leaks before I would do the epoxy thing. I've never had the paint crack but if there is a lot of movement I would assume it would crack like any other paint.
 
Anyone on here covered their garage floor with that epoxy/paint? Thinking about doing it and wondered if it was worth the investment?

Pros/Cons?

It really looks nice and clean...wondered about drawbacks?

I put the tan Rustoleum stuff on my garage in 2004-5. My floor was about 3 years old at the time and only had a few old/bad spots. Followed the directions exactly. Looked great for 2 years or so. I would guess that around 15-20% has since come off the floor. I know probably 10 people who have used it and the results after 2 or 3 years are pretty mixed.

If I ever do it again, I would pay the higher price to have professional grade stuff installed.
 
I did my garage late last summer and followed every rule on the container up and beyond what it said. Cleaned the foor with the included soap, rinsed it and let it dry for longer then the the kit said to do. Applied the product and didn't walk on it for a day and didn't drive on it for 7 days, put two coats of the sealer/hardener on it and within a month of when I put it on I started getting chips coming up where the tires roll on it and sit overnight. It was the product that Sherwin Williams sells for $100 for a single stall garage. I would drive in the rain and when you would pull in the garage with wet tires and let it sit over night, that would pull up chips of the paint as well the next morning.

Now 6 months later you can tell exactly where the van and the truck sit since it is bare concrete. The rest of it looks good but that part just ticks me off because I went over and above on drying times, curing times, cleaning and everything to make sure I didn't have this problem. Not sure how you patch it either. I told Sherwin Williams that I wasn't happy with it and they gave me another kit but it probably wouldn't match. I don't know what to do now. I even waited 3 years after we moved in to make sure the concrete was cured.

Not saying I did nothing wrong, but I wish I knew what it was.

I caulked the cracks in my garage floor after painting the floor with the same color of caulk as the paint and that part looks great by the way.
 
Do the professionals/contractors who apply this stuff provide any kind of a warranty that's worthwhile? Maybe that's where the cost difference is - quality of product up front and warranty for X years?
 

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