I'm trying to prep my garage floor for to lay an epoxy. I'll start with my experiences in the last week. The end goal was to get the floor to a profile ~120 grit sandpaper.
Day 1- Acid etched with supplied materials. Wasnt happy with results, no profile.
Day 2- Acid etched with 4:1 muriatic acid, wasnt strong enough till I got 1:1. This was starting to profile the concrete but it almost seemed to be soaking into the concrete (even after continuous scrubbing/rinsing after applying). I was nervous to have contaniments left on the surface of the concrete from the acid.
Day 3- Decided to bite the bullet and go with the grinding method. A friend and fellow forum member had rented the Diamabrush from HD the same weekend. After he used it, I jumped at the oppurtunity to use it myself. It seemed to be working and it did take a thin layer off of my 3 car garage floor, but it seemed insufficient.
I cleaned a portion of the garage and the floor is very porous but it still has practically NO profile. At this point I have became extremely frustrated with this project, I've never felt more defeated on an DIY effort. It's my impression that everyone grinding with the Diamabrush has had reasonable success.
I talked to my friend who grinded his floor prior to me and he also has not acheived a profile of ~120 grit paper or near that. I thought the blades could of been dull, so I returned to HD. After the lengthy discussion, turns out the blades were still newish condition. At this point the employee is confused at the lack of performance as well and decides to look up the diamabrush parts online. Turns out the HD computer and their training said this was the concrete grinder=
^ Which actually appears to be the Mastic Removal tool....
Further investigating determined this should of been the supplied concrete prep tool =
Of course home depot doesnt have the correct tool and they will have to approve and order it (a process that can take 3 weeks).
So here I am even more frustrated with this floor, debating what to do next. I've called around and found other concrete grinders but it will costs another $200 to go that route.
My questions for anyone familar with concrete grinding-
1. Is the second picture above, known as the concrete prep tool, the unit many have used with success?
2. Will I ever achieve a profile of 120 grit sandpaper via grinding?
3. Do I NEED to have a profile of 120 grit or is the porous surface sufficient?
4. Will the Edco concrete grinder with Diamond blades get me to the desired profile of 120 grit sandpaper?
5. How many people proceed without getting the 120 grit profile and have further success with the end epoxy results?
I can post pictures of the current state of the floor tonight if that helps. Thanks in advance, this is driving me nuts...
-Travis
Day 1- Acid etched with supplied materials. Wasnt happy with results, no profile.
Day 2- Acid etched with 4:1 muriatic acid, wasnt strong enough till I got 1:1. This was starting to profile the concrete but it almost seemed to be soaking into the concrete (even after continuous scrubbing/rinsing after applying). I was nervous to have contaniments left on the surface of the concrete from the acid.
Day 3- Decided to bite the bullet and go with the grinding method. A friend and fellow forum member had rented the Diamabrush from HD the same weekend. After he used it, I jumped at the oppurtunity to use it myself. It seemed to be working and it did take a thin layer off of my 3 car garage floor, but it seemed insufficient.
I cleaned a portion of the garage and the floor is very porous but it still has practically NO profile. At this point I have became extremely frustrated with this project, I've never felt more defeated on an DIY effort. It's my impression that everyone grinding with the Diamabrush has had reasonable success.
I talked to my friend who grinded his floor prior to me and he also has not acheived a profile of ~120 grit paper or near that. I thought the blades could of been dull, so I returned to HD. After the lengthy discussion, turns out the blades were still newish condition. At this point the employee is confused at the lack of performance as well and decides to look up the diamabrush parts online. Turns out the HD computer and their training said this was the concrete grinder=
^ Which actually appears to be the Mastic Removal tool....
Further investigating determined this should of been the supplied concrete prep tool =
Of course home depot doesnt have the correct tool and they will have to approve and order it (a process that can take 3 weeks).
So here I am even more frustrated with this floor, debating what to do next. I've called around and found other concrete grinders but it will costs another $200 to go that route.
My questions for anyone familar with concrete grinding-
1. Is the second picture above, known as the concrete prep tool, the unit many have used with success?
2. Will I ever achieve a profile of 120 grit sandpaper via grinding?
3. Do I NEED to have a profile of 120 grit or is the porous surface sufficient?
4. Will the Edco concrete grinder with Diamond blades get me to the desired profile of 120 grit sandpaper?
5. How many people proceed without getting the 120 grit profile and have further success with the end epoxy results?
I can post pictures of the current state of the floor tonight if that helps. Thanks in advance, this is driving me nuts...
-Travis

