dennisoates
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2013
- Messages
- 53
am trying to finish a floor for under 500 2 car 400 sq ft thanks
I don't see where you guys are located so excuse my questions .......if the answers seem obvious.
Under what conditions can a guy use these ceramic and vinyl tiles? Should you seal the concrete first? Or maybe after the tiles are down? What about slippage if/when wet??
I'm going to be doing a garage floor where the temps can be extremely cold in the winter {-25* C to -30* C} and in the high 90's in the summer. This past summer we had 100*C .
I don't see where you guys are located so excuse my questions .......if the answers seem obvious.
Under what conditions can a guy use these ceramic and vinyl tiles? Should you seal the concrete first? Or maybe after the tiles are down? What about slippage if/when wet??
I'm going to be doing a garage floor where the temps can be extremely cold in the winter {-25* C to -30* C} and in the high 90's in the summer. This past summer we had 100*C . Also I was wondering about unseen or detectable moisture coming up through the concrete, I was going to go with "RaceDeck" but if I can go with the cheaper methods I will .....gladly.
Actually never thought about ceramic tiles. What about breakage with them? I mean you drop a wrench or part and you'd be on your knees digging out grout and replacing the broken ones. I'd like to say I'd never drop anything but I know damn well I will.

Can't be more happy with it. Coming up on 3 years with some serious abuse to it, and not one issue.
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Here's a small article on vinyl composite tile that will explain a little more about what it is and how to install it. There are quite a few people here in the forum who have VCT floors and love em. I'm sure one or two will chime in here.
Jack - Thanks for the info. I have been enjoying your garage website - It seems to be the media darling in the world of garage organization. I am too cheap to install Recedeck. I was looking at VCT, but I remember what a pain it was to maintain, as we had it in our kitchen growing up, and it was my job to strip it once a year. Cheers, PaulAll tiles are rated for hardness, a PEI rating, which goes from 1-5 -- you want 4 or 5, as well as coefficient of friction, different numbers meet different codes -- mine were rated for outdoor mall use, so they're not very slippery, as well as moisture content, which will determine if they will be okay with freeze/thaw cycles.
My tiles were .59/sf at Home Depot and this is a very short video of me hitting them with a 4-lb sledge hammer.
uh... how did you get the X5 on 4 ramps? Is there enough clearance between the car and ground to put a set of ramps behind the front wheels?
