I know I want a hard-coat floor for my garage. I know I don't want Racedeck or similar non-permanent floors, and I know I don't want porcelain tile.
I've talked to a bunch of people. Some say MMA is the best. Some say polyuretic is the best. Some say epoxy is the best. The warranties from installers in my area would seem to indicate that poly or MMA is the best, since they're 20 years or lifetime whereas epoxy seems to top out at 15, or so I've found so far. However, warranties don't always tell the whole story, especially if the company issuing the warranty goes out of business.
It's going in a garage which will be actively used for car work - not just mine, but my car club's as well. There will be 1500+ pound tool chests rolling around on it, shop cranes with engines hanging off of them rolling around on it, floor jacks, etc. Fluid spills, the works. So, it needs to be durable and take punishment.
Installers for each material have given me examples of where they've installed it to prove durability (airline hangers, mechanics, etc), but there's an obvious bias when an installer only works with one flooring type.
What's the consensus on here? I'm good with paying extra for a floor that will last through a lot of activity and look good while doing it - I just have no clue which floor to consider.
I've talked to a bunch of people. Some say MMA is the best. Some say polyuretic is the best. Some say epoxy is the best. The warranties from installers in my area would seem to indicate that poly or MMA is the best, since they're 20 years or lifetime whereas epoxy seems to top out at 15, or so I've found so far. However, warranties don't always tell the whole story, especially if the company issuing the warranty goes out of business.
It's going in a garage which will be actively used for car work - not just mine, but my car club's as well. There will be 1500+ pound tool chests rolling around on it, shop cranes with engines hanging off of them rolling around on it, floor jacks, etc. Fluid spills, the works. So, it needs to be durable and take punishment.
Installers for each material have given me examples of where they've installed it to prove durability (airline hangers, mechanics, etc), but there's an obvious bias when an installer only works with one flooring type.
What's the consensus on here? I'm good with paying extra for a floor that will last through a lot of activity and look good while doing it - I just have no clue which floor to consider.
