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Cheap and durable garage floor coating?

gregers05

New member
Joined
Oct 7, 2013
Messages
4
Location
Hebron, KY
I am relatively new to the forum, I have been lurking for a few months, but just bought a house so will probably be more active here.

Our new house has a standar ~400sqft garage. It is just bare concrete in it right now. I do a lot of work on my truck (used for offroading) so it will see a lot of welding, grinding, cutting and will need to withstand parts sliding on the floor, floor jacks, and jack stands. Also needs to be resistant to fluids.

I originally wanted to do epoxy, but it is expensive and may not hold up to heavy use.

What options do I have that is durable and cheap? Would just primer work? It may not hold up that well, but would be easy to touch up. Could polish and seal it, but it would be slick and isnt all that cheap.

any options out there, or am I dreaming?
 
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Garage Flooring

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
May 21, 2011
Messages
5,288
Location
Grand Junction, CO
:beer: You have to be careful the word cheap here. We all tend to get a little uptight. The home centers have started marketing these $99 miracle garage floor coatings in a box where after a quick application of pixie dust and orange juice you roll on a coating that is 70% water and have a garage floor that will last forever and not lift from hot tires :willy_nil

I am only half kidding, and I am really not poking fun at you, just some of the stuff people sell.

Legacy industrial has some great kits. Epoxy-coat does, but I would always use a top coat. We also have a good selection of DIY Garage floor epoxy kits

Take your time, buy a good product and be willing to spend the time it takes to do the install properly. If not, save yourself the aggravation and go with a garage floor mat or garage floor tile.
 

Will S.

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2010
Messages
446
Location
The First State
Been doing research for something for my floor, and found a product made by H&C (and sold at Sherwin Willams stores), that looks to be what you're asking for. They have a solid color penetratin sealer that claims to be durable and resists most chemicals, oil and salt. I'm hoping to find someone with first hand knowledge about the stuff
 

jmack

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 21, 2008
Messages
190
Like Jake suggested, cheap and durable are really on opposite ends of the spectrum as it relates to the cost/effort of flooring. I think what you may be asking is what is the best value in flooring (best mix of durability at low cost). To do that you simply need to calculate the cost per sf of each option and weight it based on some durability factor.

In my research, I've settled on porcelain tile. Haven't done the project yet, but it'll be about $2-3 per sqft assuming I lay the tiles myself. Will be extremely durable and good looking.
 

slickgt1

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 11, 2010
Messages
1,674
typically, "cheap" and "durable" work together kinda like "oil" and "water".:D

How about tile. I understand the definition of cheap is relative, but if you can do the work yourself, $1sq ft is very doable.
 
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