This is from the current issue (September 2010) of The Family Handyman magazine:
Garage floor envy. This coating is not only drool-worthy, but also a reasonably priced and durable, DIY-friendly product that dries in a day. RockSolid Floors' polyurea multilayer garage floor coating system is similar to epoxy floor paint, but the company claims it's four times tougher. Polyurea has been used in commercial coating applications for 25 years. The kits include a polyurea primer coat, polyurea, decorative chips and a clear topcoat. Each kit covers 250 sq. ft. The partial chip version costs $299, and a full-chip ad-on kit costs an additional $249. It's available in six colors at selected Lowe's stores, lowes.com and rocksolidfloors.com
I've searched RockSolid on this forum but have come up mostly with warnings against using polyurea. I can't imagine the manufacturer would market a kit to the DIY market that is difficult or dangerous to work with ... that's why I would like to hear from someone who has actually used the product. I'd also like to know what "four times tougher" than epoxy means.
Thanks for any info you may be able to provide ... I'm still trying to decide on a product for my year-old garage floor.
Garage floor envy. This coating is not only drool-worthy, but also a reasonably priced and durable, DIY-friendly product that dries in a day. RockSolid Floors' polyurea multilayer garage floor coating system is similar to epoxy floor paint, but the company claims it's four times tougher. Polyurea has been used in commercial coating applications for 25 years. The kits include a polyurea primer coat, polyurea, decorative chips and a clear topcoat. Each kit covers 250 sq. ft. The partial chip version costs $299, and a full-chip ad-on kit costs an additional $249. It's available in six colors at selected Lowe's stores, lowes.com and rocksolidfloors.com
I've searched RockSolid on this forum but have come up mostly with warnings against using polyurea. I can't imagine the manufacturer would market a kit to the DIY market that is difficult or dangerous to work with ... that's why I would like to hear from someone who has actually used the product. I'd also like to know what "four times tougher" than epoxy means.
Thanks for any info you may be able to provide ... I'm still trying to decide on a product for my year-old garage floor.



