l_bilyk
Well-known member
These kits are on sale this week at canadian tire. Will I be OK using these kits or should I get the solvent-based kit?
The prep you do and how you use the floor will have as much to do as the money you spend. I used the water based 2 part epoxy system and it has held up fine for well over 4 years in an active project oriented shop. Some gouges that also took out chunks of concrete too and one tire lift spot. The lift spot was in a spot where the concrete was almost glossy and I should have prepped it better. Just an internet opinion. Is it better than the $$$ stuff? No. Is is 1/2 or 3/4 as good as the stuff that costs 8 times as much? Easily so. It gets the job done. I have an easy to clean floor with no oils soaking into the cement and no cement dust to deal with. It is not a showroom floor but it is also not a showroom.

No problem! That bit of cloth means a lot to me. Some folks have their hearts in the right place but don't know the rules of displaying our flag. I saw one tied by one corner to the back of a dump truck a couple days ago. Well about 1/2 of one as it was ragged out and filthy. I bugged the driver in a nice way about it at a light.Thank you for hanging your flag the correct way!![]()
These kits are on sale this week at canadian tire. Will I be OK using these kits or should I get the solvent-based kit?
I think a flag is the first thing that's going up in my garage.
Hmmm... We've got Red... We've got White... We've got blue...
Got Floor? lol...
I don't guess you should park on the flag though eh.... lol...
I talked to Fred on Saturday and finalized the order...I decided on the ole black/blue/white on gray...can't go wrong with it, and couldn't find a combo that I liked better.I think a flag is the first thing that's going up in my garage.
Hmmm... We've got Red... We've got White... We've got blue...
Got Floor? lol...
I don't guess you should park on the flag though eh.... lol...
How about "Don't tread on Me".
These kits are on sale this week at canadian tire. Will I be OK using these kits or should I get the solvent-based kit?
The shelf was already empty of the grey, but they had Tan -luckily, I asked them to check the Wharehouse and they found two kits of the grey.
Nows here's the part I find odd: The kits say: One car garage up to 23 sq Meter coverage (about 500 Sq Ft). Where I'm from 500 Sq ft is a two car garage. I have a 2 car garage that's about 500 SQ ft and a 24x38 shop, or nearly 1000 sq ft.
I'm hoping the two kits cover the shop (1000 sq ft), but I wouldn't want to start and not have enough!!
DO you think it'll cover??![]()
But we do know this:
A gallon of liquid will coat 1,604 square feet to a depth of 1 mil when it's wet. If it has solvents or water, those will dissipate as the product cures, so your final coating depth will be proportionally thinner. For example - if a coating that's only 75% solids goes on at 4 mils thick when it's applied will be only 3 mils thick when it finally cures.
Which brings us to yet another question: "How thick should my coating be?" The answer depends on many factors. Wolverine Coatings recommends a minimum of 5 mils for the primer coat, 12 mils for the body coat, and 5 mils for the clear coat. For certain situations it would be prudent to use more material.
So how many gallons would that be? I've rarely seen an Epoxy system with primer and I've seen posts recommending no primer...maybe I should try to buy 2 more kits and just pour it all out??
In that case, based on your experience, would any type of primer make the Rostelum a "better" product or longer lasting? According to your post, and I sort of agree, no matter what system you use, you should always primer the surface.
