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Finally got my Epoxy floor in!

nsogiba

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
I had not really done any cleaning or improvements to the garage itself in over 2 years, so I finally made time to perform some work that I'd been wanting since we had moved in. The concrete floor was physically in good shape with only very minimal pitting but the constant work on other cars had left lots of stains and oil all over the place. My good friend works for a floor repair contractor, so it was a no brainer to use his experience in getting the floor coated.

Friday night: clean, scrub, degrease, then bust out the diamond grinders. One large unit for big surface area and I ran the smaller one for corners and edges.

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Pre/post grind
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The amount of dust, even with a full size industrial vacuum running, was insane. Even with a respirator, eye protection, and double hearing protection I was feeling it after the job. Next time: use kneepads!
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Being as my garage is a "working" space, I opted for an "industrial" color/flake pattern, to hopefully hide some of the future scars from dropping tools and parts.
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Saturday morning:

After much vacuuming and sweeping we filled some small cracks.

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Then came set up of the mixing station and equipment for base coat. Cut in edges, squeegee open areas, backroll, repeat. We had to move quickly due to the fast cure time of the material, but it went well.

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The custom stainless baseplate for the MaxJax lift was taped off to leave a nice sharp edge. I'll be hitting it with a wire wheel after the floor has cured to give the stainless a nice shine against the contrast of the floor. The garbage bag in the middle is protecting the floor drain.
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While I finished up backrolling the front of the floor from the driveway, the man in the spiked shoes began the "broadcast of the flake system" (lots of lingo in the flooring industry). Notice how filthy the walls look :( I'll need to scrub those!
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Sunday was flake vacuuming, scraping, and vacuuming. Then the topcoat (clear) went down.

Final product:
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Over the next few weeks I'll be painting the lower part of the foundation/concrete with a gray masonry paint to hide that last bit of exposed stone, washing the walls, and thinking about a new cabinet/storage system to hold all my stuff.

Maybe I'll wrap my C5 in a "Digital Camo" to match the floor...

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Shea

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Joined
Sep 19, 2012
Messages
2,866
Location
California
Great job! Your floor turned out well. I don't envy the wall cleaning, however. :scared:
 

10baggio10

Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2017
Messages
19
Great job. turned out amazing. Did you install that MaxJax lift system in the concrete yourself?
 
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nsogiba

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Joined
Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
Got a couple hours worth of painting done last night in the garage. The lower concrete foundation and trim was the last bit of exposed stone left, so it got a coat of Masonry paint that I bought 3 years ago. Came back to life once I power mixed it.

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idriveahonda

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2017
Messages
160
Keep an eye out for efflorescence, will pop the paint at the bottom.

Mine was pretty bad, then used Radonseal and waited a week for it to purge. Wire wheeled all off, used Drylock, then really good black paint.

Still having some spots where it is coming through or still purging.

Loved reading your entire thread!
 
Joined
Aug 9, 2017
Messages
266
Location
Boise
You mean kinda like this?

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That Cobra isn't mine, just an example of the vinyl wrap.

cool wrap on the Cobra.

Love Mustangs, but being a Chevy/Mopar fan I have to comment when I see Mustangs.

Here are a couple old GM cars of mine.
 

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nsogiba

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
How smooth is the floor? It looks sort of rough.

It definitely has texture, which is fine considering I wash the cars during the winter time, so the floor will need some anti slip characteristics. Still smooth enough that water just rolls right across it towards the drain.

A perfectly smooth, monotone floor was high on my list but it would be slippery when wet and would show marks from tools being dropped and heavy objects rolled across it.

Keep an eye out for efflorescence, will pop the paint at the bottom.

Mine was pretty bad, then used Radonseal and waited a week for it to purge. Wire wheeled all off, used Drylock, then really good black paint.

Still having some spots where it is coming through or still purging.

Loved reading your entire thread!

Sorry to hear about your issues. I have some very tiny bubbles in the clear but they're leveling out as I walk on the floor. Invisible unless you're about 3 inches from it.

Grandpa Menard, cool F-bodies and Y-bodies.
 
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