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Are You Guys ALL Flakes?

bczygan

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Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
22,002
Location
DETROIT! Arsenal of Scrappers
I see so many floors done with one or even more colors of flakes sprinkled into the finish.

WHY?

It looks like ersatz terrazzo. Like some kind of 90's dance floor. I almost expect to see a mirror ball.

And ESPECIALLY if you do work in your garage or shop.

It would drive me crazy, if I dropped a nut or bolt or other small item.

To me, the only sane floor finish would be a monochrome. Not black or white, but something that would allow a dropped part to be easily spotted.

What say you all? Are flakes ticky-tacky or beautiful beyond belief?

Bill
 
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bczygan

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Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
22,002
Location
DETROIT! Arsenal of Scrappers
It's what's new. Remember when the fad was B&W racedeck flooring? Or Red Terrazo Tile?

I still am a fan of poured smoothed sealed concrete. Way easy to squeegie out at the end of the week. Then again I'm pretty old school - or cheap - or both...

I wonder too.

Will all these floors be dated in 10 years, like oak Merilllat cabinets?

Bill
 

gregtwojeeps

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Joined
Jul 30, 2013
Messages
5,096
Location
Ky
I get enough of, " Don't drop that on the floor" !! from my wife. I don't give a rat's azz what gets dropped on my plain, sealed concrete floor.
 

DC73

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Joined
Dec 27, 2014
Messages
1,627
Location
Lubbock TX
I see so many floors done with one or even more colors of flakes sprinkled into the finish.

What say you all?

Bill

It's a mixed bag. I was on the fence but bought flakes just in case I needed them with my Rust Bullet install. After the 1st coat of Rust Bullet, I made the decision to go with the flakes when I realized the floor had too many imperfections and the flakes would hide them. The floor in the detached garage (with flakes) always looks cleaner than the attached garage floor (plain concrete) even when it's not. So the flakes help hide dirt and debris as well. The downside, as you pointed out, is finding a small part that gets drops on the floor.

If I had to do it again, I would still go with the flakes.

DC
 
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reader2580

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Joined
Dec 31, 2014
Messages
14,570
Location
Minneapolis, MN
Flakes have been around forever. I did my basement floor 10+ years ago and had the option of flakes, but I went monochrome. It looked pretty nice except the beginning where the lint from the the roller stuck to the epoxy.
 

shedfullatools

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Joined
Apr 10, 2016
Messages
834
Location
Nova Scotia
Personally if I had the chance to build a shop with a concrete floor it would be bare concrete with a densifier. Nothing handles sparks spatters and dragging heavy sharp stuff quite like bare concrete :thumbup: For me the densifier would simply be so when I drop an anvil or pound on the end of a steel rod on the concrete I wouldn't lose fist sized chunks out of the floor :scared:
 

Trey T

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Joined
Aug 3, 2011
Messages
3,749
Location
Houston, TX
I'm not a big fan of flakes. I do have a portion of my garage that's flaked (not enough) but that's just for show, to match my black exposed beams. If I were to do it all over all, I would do a single color, monochrome, white or super-light gray.

every time I mop the floor, the shine is amazing, it's so easy to clean .... so worth it.

ay3rpu.jpg
 

Jo Diesel

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Joined
Aug 26, 2015
Messages
402
Location
St. Johns MI
If I ever do another floor its going to be concrete with the hard surfacing compound done in a swirling pattern burnished smooth. Like Wally World. Not as expensive or hard as I thought.
People said it would be slippery. I said, clean up your mess when you pick your *** up off the floor.
images

Something like this with more tans, grays, and a little copper
 
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CoogarXR

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Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
6,867
Location
Ohio
I think I will make my next garage floor like this:

1. Build a 2" frame border
2. Dump about 100lbs of random hardware, nuts, bolts, washers, wire connectors
3. Spread it around nice and smooth
4. Cover the entire floor in self-leveling clear epoxy.

Now try to find that dropped bolt!
 

Shiftless

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Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
14,562
Location
East Bay SFO
I think I will make my next garage floor like this:

1. Build a 2" frame border
2. Dump about 100lbs of random hardware, nuts, bolts, washers, wire connectors
3. Spread it around nice and smooth
4. Cover the entire floor in self-leveling clear epoxy.

Now try to find that dropped bolt!

:lol:
I was in a hotel bar back east somewhere.
The bar surface was one layer of old pennies laid out evenly and covered with about 1/8 inch clear epoxy. Beautiful!
 
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Armorpoxy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2013
Messages
3,735
Location
NJ
I see so many floors done with one or even more colors of flakes sprinkled into the finish.

WHY?

It looks like ersatz terrazzo. Like some kind of 90's dance floor. I almost expect to see a mirror ball.

And ESPECIALLY if you do work in your garage or shop.

It would drive me crazy, if I dropped a nut or bolt or other small item.

To me, the only sane floor finish would be a monochrome. Not black or white, but something that would allow a dropped part to be easily spotted.

What say you all? Are flakes ticky-tacky or beautiful beyond belief?

Bill



Hi we don't disagree that in a working shop a flake look is often distracting to find small parts. We have even had a few clients over the years recoat a fleck floor with a solid for this reason.

The flip side is that a fleck type floor breaks it up visually and doesn't show all of the dirt and junk that cars drag in.

It's a personal choice and we see many people use both.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Amann34

Active member
Joined
Mar 23, 2016
Messages
26
uploadfromtaptalk1466475127669.jpg
I did that armour garage epoxy in light gray. Pretty good so far. A few years ago i did a u-coat it system ans i let the guy talk me into doing the color chips even though i was sure i didn't want it. Sure enough i didn't like it at all. Drop a screw and good luck finding it. Also the anti slip grit was impossible to squeegee!
The anti slip stuff that came with armour garage works great! Not too slippery and a squeegee works fine. Just say no to the paint chips!
 

Dan in Pasadena

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,158
Location
Pasadena, CA
I see so many floors done with one or even more colors of flakes sprinkled into the finish.

WHY?

It looks like ersatz terrazzo. Like some kind of 90's dance floor. I almost expect to see a mirror ball.

And ESPECIALLY if you do work in your garage or shop.

It would drive me crazy, if I dropped a nut or bolt or other small item.

To me, the only sane floor finish would be a monochrome. Not black or white, but something that would allow a dropped part to be easily spotted.

What say you all? Are flakes ticky-tacky or beautiful beyond belief?

Bill

Strokes/folks. It's why they make chocolate and vanilla.
 

Thumper68

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2013
Messages
5,134
Location
Duluth MN
Mine was Industrial gray epoxy no flakes just for the reasons you mentioned, now it is industrial stained with sparks, over spray, scrape and scratch marks, oil and other fluids.

The wood working side of the shop is still almost pristine industrial gray, with only a few spots where wood stain and paint dripped.

But the only time a vehicle is in the shop is while it is being worked on.

We have been thinking that a 2+ attached with a breeze way to the cabin might be nice when we retire and that might get flakes, since it will be a storage/parking structure only.
 

LegacyIndustrial

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 7, 2010
Messages
7,995
Location
deerfield, IL
I see so many floors done with one or even more colors of flakes sprinkled into the finish.

WHY?

It looks like ersatz terrazzo. Like some kind of 90's dance floor. I almost expect to see a mirror ball.

And ESPECIALLY if you do work in your garage or shop.

It would drive me crazy, if I dropped a nut or bolt or other small item.

To me, the only sane floor finish would be a monochrome. Not black or white, but something that would allow a dropped part to be easily spotted.

What say you all? Are flakes ticky-tacky or beautiful beyond belief?

Bill

You think your floor is flat and perfect until you put a high gloss on it. Then you see hills and valleys, the light flake distribution pulls your eyes from this.

Not everyone is Mr. Clean. Flakes help hide a little dust/debris on the floor.

We shoot our flakes on the floor with a hopper gun. It looks crazy good, no disco.:shocking:
 
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