evilcheese
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2010
- Messages
- 31
Well, half of it anyway. Today was the day. After many, many days of scrubbing, scraping, etching, and rinsing, I felt pretty good about the prep. Because I can’t leave stuff outside my garage for a few days, I have to do one half at a time. I’ll do the other side tomorrow. As far as putting down the epoxy, it’s was pretty dang easy. This 10’ x 24’ section took 2 hours and that included the taping. I did have a couple of little glitches which I will cover next. But overall, the floor looks fantastic and I’m really pleased with the results so far. Hopefully my experience will help someone else.
I purchased two half kits from epoxt-coat.com, each one can cover 250 sq ft. Which was perfect for my garage, as each half is 240 sq ft. And since I’m doing this in two phases, having two of everything, mixer, bucket, brush, roller, etc works out perfect.
I laid the epoxy down in two batches. Using the measuring stick, a batch can cover 10’ x 12’ feet. And the amount was perfect. You need to be careful when you pour out the epoxy. I poured too much at one end and had to squeegee a bunch around to get even coverage. I did better on the second batch.
I only ended up using about 1 pound of flakes to get medium coverage. This surprised me. I bought 4 pounds based on the estimates on the epoxy-coat.com site.
You definitely need spikes shoes. I was thinking I didn’t need them at first, but after doing some dry runs to check distances, it was clear I needed to be stepping in the epoxy to cover the entire area. I made mine using 3/8 plywood, 1 and 1/4" screws, and self-sticking Velcro.
Ok, here are the glitches.
- The gloves that come with the kit are junk. Sorry epoxy-coat. I ripped through both in about 2 minutes. Buy better gloves and more of them. The epoxy is pretty sticky stuff. It washes off, but it’s not like latex paint. It’s gummy and sticky.
- The squeegee’s that came with my kit didn’t have threads. It looks like it’s some kind of pressed on fit. Luckily it has a hole on the collar, so I just turned one of my handles around, shoved the squeegee on, and put a screw through it.
- One roller is not enough. When I got to the second batch, the roller was just hard enough where it wasn’t holding epoxy. It was just kind of skating on the surface. Luckily because I had two kits, I had the second roller. Maybe if I was faster getting to the second batch, it wouldn’t have been a problem. Tomorrow, I will have the second roller already on a handle and ready to go. This way I won’t have pull the used roller off, which is a mess.
- Cracks. I filled most of the cracks I had with caulk. But I can still see the smaller cracks that I did not fill. I expected the epoxy to fill them. But it didn’t. I’m not sure I could even caulk them, they’re very thin. Maybe a second coat of epoxy would cover them. I’m not that too concerned about them. And the flakes sort of camouflage them.
- Bubbles. I had bubbles. About 1-3 per sq ft. Thankfully, I purchased a small electric leaf blower and had it on hand. It really works well on popping the bubbles. Once they pop, the epoxy starts to level out.
This is the blower I got from Lowes. $35.
Lowes
There you go.
I purchased two half kits from epoxt-coat.com, each one can cover 250 sq ft. Which was perfect for my garage, as each half is 240 sq ft. And since I’m doing this in two phases, having two of everything, mixer, bucket, brush, roller, etc works out perfect.
I laid the epoxy down in two batches. Using the measuring stick, a batch can cover 10’ x 12’ feet. And the amount was perfect. You need to be careful when you pour out the epoxy. I poured too much at one end and had to squeegee a bunch around to get even coverage. I did better on the second batch.
I only ended up using about 1 pound of flakes to get medium coverage. This surprised me. I bought 4 pounds based on the estimates on the epoxy-coat.com site.
You definitely need spikes shoes. I was thinking I didn’t need them at first, but after doing some dry runs to check distances, it was clear I needed to be stepping in the epoxy to cover the entire area. I made mine using 3/8 plywood, 1 and 1/4" screws, and self-sticking Velcro.
Ok, here are the glitches.
- The gloves that come with the kit are junk. Sorry epoxy-coat. I ripped through both in about 2 minutes. Buy better gloves and more of them. The epoxy is pretty sticky stuff. It washes off, but it’s not like latex paint. It’s gummy and sticky.
- The squeegee’s that came with my kit didn’t have threads. It looks like it’s some kind of pressed on fit. Luckily it has a hole on the collar, so I just turned one of my handles around, shoved the squeegee on, and put a screw through it.
- One roller is not enough. When I got to the second batch, the roller was just hard enough where it wasn’t holding epoxy. It was just kind of skating on the surface. Luckily because I had two kits, I had the second roller. Maybe if I was faster getting to the second batch, it wouldn’t have been a problem. Tomorrow, I will have the second roller already on a handle and ready to go. This way I won’t have pull the used roller off, which is a mess.
- Cracks. I filled most of the cracks I had with caulk. But I can still see the smaller cracks that I did not fill. I expected the epoxy to fill them. But it didn’t. I’m not sure I could even caulk them, they’re very thin. Maybe a second coat of epoxy would cover them. I’m not that too concerned about them. And the flakes sort of camouflage them.
- Bubbles. I had bubbles. About 1-3 per sq ft. Thankfully, I purchased a small electric leaf blower and had it on hand. It really works well on popping the bubbles. Once they pop, the epoxy starts to level out.
This is the blower I got from Lowes. $35.
Lowes
There you go.
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). I used about 1 1/2 pounds for 480 sq ft. I think this would be classified as light coverage. I needed spike shoes because I couldn't reach the entire area I was applying for rolling and spreading flakes. 10' x 12' at a time. I'm sure you could do smaller sections, but you would need to measure part A and B carefully to make smaller batches.
. I used mainly simple green and Zep industrial purple cleaner. The Zep works really well at removing oil spots. For etching I used Klean-Strip® Green™ Safer Muriatic Acid in a 4 to 1 ratio.