Wow, thanks you just saved me a headache because i planned on using Wooster rollers! i see we are using the came epoxy, any suggestions on how i should apply yhr first coat, heavy, thin?
Based on A LOT of searching around here I would say your first coat should be thin or VERY thin. I read something here recently that contradicted that, but that was one post against probably a dozen in favor of a very thin, solvent based, like product primer. In other words, Rustoleum Pro makes this easy because coat one counts as a perfect primer.
The lone voice in favor of a thick first coat was where a guy was suggesting keep a wet roller to prevent streaks, but I think that ignores one problem to solve another less important problem. And you can solve the streak problem another way; with a second coat. You can't solve a bubble problem with just a second coat, so priority one is prevent bubbles from off-gassing, which requires a thin first coat.
To that end, I think you should keep a medium wet roller, so "not too loud/dry" and "not to quiet/wet", which is going to make it prone to lose a little lint. Woven mohair is the best you can hope for in this department, and I would definitely go with 18" on at least a 6' handle. There are all sorts of tips about preventing bubbles; don't mix too aggressively, pour it on the concrete vice into a roller pan, don't apply while it's hot and getting hotter, but I didn't do any of that and I don't think the Rustoleum pro cares a bit. In fact, I broke all three of those rules and because it was a thin layer of solvent based epoxy, I got away with it with ease. No bubbles anywhere.
A 3/8" or 1/2" nap roller will hold A LOT of product, so I used medium pressure while rolling just to push it out pretty thin. I covered 650 sq/ft with 4 gallons, which came out pretty thin because it was so porous. If you pour it on the floor (which I tried once in a small area) it will need to be squeegee'd so it doesn't end up super thick where it was poured. The roller won't push it away from there like a squeegee would. I will pour it out and squeegee and backroll it for coat two, but I rolled it from a tray for coat 1.
I found one long thread in particular where the OP (and then follow on people with the same disaster) were posting about major issues with Epoxycoat bubbling while it cured. All the pros were saying the guy should have primed with a high solvents product and that it should have been a very thin layer, but the people at Epoxycoat void the warranty if you put anything down under their product so this has gotten to be a common problem. The thin primer/1st coat supposedly locks away moisture from your "money" layer that you put down as a second coat. That's my plan. 4 more gallons which should go A LOT further now that the pores are filled in. 16hrs later it looks good, no bubbles, but lots of uneven finish. NO idea why Rustoleum ever says one coat should do. I guess they figure the chips will hide the unevenness. Good luck.