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I pulled the trigger, my new polyaspartic floor

67pete300

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2008
Messages
342
Location
East Lyme, CT
So I read and read and agonized and flip-flopped. Very close to buying Motofloor tiles, switched back to epoxy. Almost ordered Epoxy-Guard. Finally just paid a contractor to install a full-broadcast polyaspartic polyurea floor. It was very expensive. But it is done. And I am very happy with it. Here are some of the things that influenced my decision (ranked roughly from most important to least.)

1. The contractor could get the job done before the moving truck came with my household goods and the garage filled up with stuff. I could not. I'm pretty sure the probability of actually installing a DIY floor dropped precipitously once the "stuff" came.

2. My wife was on board with it (the contractor and $$.) We have a new house budget that we are burning through so although the floor ate the whole garage budget (which was to have covered storage etc.) we had the money available.

3. I really, really didn't want to mess around with acid etching the floor. Sure plenty of people have done it successfully, but it sounds plenty messy and unpleasant. Plus my floor was pretty stained. Renting a floor grinder and diamond stones didn't sound like any walk in the park either.

4. My DIY skills are pretty basic and conducting some risk management, even if I could get the probability of success to an acceptable level, the consequences of screwing it up were pretty severe. The contractor guarantees the floor for 10 years.

5. I like the hard plastic tiles like Racedeck, but ultimately I was pretty sure I would like an epoxy type floor better. My wife talked me out of the Motofloor buy. A big reason I was leaning towards the tiles were the lack of any prep required (see #3 and 4.)

6. The polyaspartic is UV stable (unlike many of the DIY epoxy solutions-I know there are some that are better than others.)

So fault me if you will for whatever reason, one fact remains: I used to just be a guy looking at pictures and stories of other guy's floors and agonizing over what to do. Now I am a guy with a very, very nice garage floor and can worry about finishing the garage trim, getting my new Craftsman storage set up, installing some lighting and outlets, and all the other projects.

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Oh yeah, I also cheated and had the painters paint the interior of the garage. They were doing the rest of the house and only wanted $300 more for the garage so I couldn't pass up that deal.
 
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tfs

Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2008
Messages
7
Location
Phoenix, AZ
Good looking floor. If you don't mind me asking, what was the sq/ft price, name and # of the contractor, and what polyaspartic product do they use?
 

WolverineCoatings

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2007
Messages
833
Location
Spartanburg, SC
It sounds like a pretty well thought out decision to me. It would be hard to fault you. The important thing is... it's done... it's paid for... and your wife still likes you!
 

thegarageguy

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Joined
Oct 24, 2007
Messages
1,489
Location
NJ
If I may ask;

How did they prep?

How many days in total?

When where you able to drive back in it?

And why the hell didn't you have them do the stem walls?!?!?!
 
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67pete300

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2008
Messages
342
Location
East Lyme, CT
If I may ask;

How did they prep?

How many days in total?

When where you able to drive back in it?

And why the hell didn't you have them do the stem walls?!?!?!

Hand grinder on a special dolly around the edges. BIG grinder for the rest of the floor with a BIG vacuum to **** up the dust. He had to use a 15kW generator in his truck to power them. My questionable garage wiring couldn't even run the hand grinder and vacuum without popping the breaker.

Three days total but could have easily been done in two. One day to grind. Primer coat and base coat with chips on day two. Clear top coat day three.

The movers came the next day with just foot traffic and nothing too heavy. The Chevelle parked in it's new home about 3.5 days after top coat.

We talked about doing the stem walls but that would have added a considerable chunk to an already very expensive job. I plan to trim them out and paint them. I agree that would have been very cool.
 
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67pete300

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2008
Messages
342
Location
East Lyme, CT
Good looking floor. If you don't mind me asking, what was the sq/ft price, name and # of the contractor, and what polyaspartic product do they use?

He a small local outfit in Northern Va. If you are really interested (you're in Az?) I can PM you the details. I'll have to look up the supplier names. I picked out the chip recipe from their website.
 

pcaulfie

Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2007
Messages
6
67pete300. I'm in NOVA and interested in the details. I have a similar size garage and have flip flopped many times at what to do. At some point, it may just be easier to pay to get it done right and get it done fast. If you get a chance, please PM the details.
 
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