Schoeny
Active member
Been watching some of the other threads, figured I'd make my own to not muddy up those continuing conversations.
We just closed on our new home in small town Iowa, in city limits, but built as big of an attached garage as we could within the lot limitations.
We've got essentially a 950 sq. ft. garage in an "L" shape, which the floor concrete was poured back in early March.
The concrete was power troweled, and left with a very smooth finish from the concrete team.
I started out renting a floor polisher and running a red pad on it (dry) to try and get up some of the drywall/paint/etc that was left over from the build.

After about 20 minutes of that, I decided to go with a black pad as the red wasn't removing enough for my liking.

Once clean, I got some Quickcrete patch compound to fill in a few voids that were too big to ignore and sanded them back flush with a 120 grit pad on my palm sander.

I planned to mop it up and get ready for install, but after a bit of realizing it was A) too big, and B)too dirty, I went to HD and rented a hard floor cleaner/vacuum and it was WAAAAAY easier and more effective. Still took a bit of effort to move it around, but it was totally worth it.

Waited another couple days for the temps to get down a bit, then applied the Armorpoxy 8400X sealer with a roller, and cut in the edges with a cheap chip brush. This took about an hour to do by myself, and was very easy work as it's so liquid and you're just trying to get a layer on it to have the pad soak it up.


As mentioned in other threads, the sealer went a LONG way on this floor since it was so smooth. I only used about 2/3 of the two gallons sent, so I still have 1-1/3 left for the basketball court next spring.

I left that overnight and the next evening, my wife and I applied the Ballistix.
The mix got very hot, very quick, as the instructions said, and after about an hour, I dropped it in the freezer to cool it down so we wouldn't be applying at midnight (as suggested in their YouTube videos). 30 minutes later, it was under 100, and I mixed in part C, then 5 minutes later, mixed in the antiskid powder that my wife thought was cocaine.

I ran the sprayer with her following along with the mop, and we worked our way through the garage in about 45 minutes and left to eat.
Came home a few hours later and it was dry to the touch. The next morning I walked out on it and everything looks dry and set up to continue curing.

We just closed on our new home in small town Iowa, in city limits, but built as big of an attached garage as we could within the lot limitations.
We've got essentially a 950 sq. ft. garage in an "L" shape, which the floor concrete was poured back in early March.
The concrete was power troweled, and left with a very smooth finish from the concrete team.
I started out renting a floor polisher and running a red pad on it (dry) to try and get up some of the drywall/paint/etc that was left over from the build.

After about 20 minutes of that, I decided to go with a black pad as the red wasn't removing enough for my liking.

Once clean, I got some Quickcrete patch compound to fill in a few voids that were too big to ignore and sanded them back flush with a 120 grit pad on my palm sander.

I planned to mop it up and get ready for install, but after a bit of realizing it was A) too big, and B)too dirty, I went to HD and rented a hard floor cleaner/vacuum and it was WAAAAAY easier and more effective. Still took a bit of effort to move it around, but it was totally worth it.

Waited another couple days for the temps to get down a bit, then applied the Armorpoxy 8400X sealer with a roller, and cut in the edges with a cheap chip brush. This took about an hour to do by myself, and was very easy work as it's so liquid and you're just trying to get a layer on it to have the pad soak it up.


As mentioned in other threads, the sealer went a LONG way on this floor since it was so smooth. I only used about 2/3 of the two gallons sent, so I still have 1-1/3 left for the basketball court next spring.

I left that overnight and the next evening, my wife and I applied the Ballistix.
The mix got very hot, very quick, as the instructions said, and after about an hour, I dropped it in the freezer to cool it down so we wouldn't be applying at midnight (as suggested in their YouTube videos). 30 minutes later, it was under 100, and I mixed in part C, then 5 minutes later, mixed in the antiskid powder that my wife thought was cocaine.

I ran the sprayer with her following along with the mop, and we worked our way through the garage in about 45 minutes and left to eat.
Came home a few hours later and it was dry to the touch. The next morning I walked out on it and everything looks dry and set up to continue curing.







