porcelain in the garage... I would have never guessed
your's is not slippery when wet? texture surface?
porcelain in the garage... I would have never guessed
your's is not slippery when wet? texture surface?

I know this is an old thread but your garage is the bomb. it looks fantastic.
Is there a difference in porcelain tiles? Also what cabinets and bench are those?
Just found out today that people tile garages... after seeing yours I'm starting to understand why. Looks great.
Bd, time for some 2015 shotsI know the floor is likely looking the same as day 1, but any comments/pics you have would be great.
The only frustrating thing is that I have 3000sqft of Jerusalem stone inside downstairs that I am having continual problems keeping clean (and I've been putting off grinding/polishing for other projects) so my garage floor looks cleaner than the inside. Much of that has to do with the dark slate color of my tile--so that is what I would recommend if you want to get away with a durable floor and no maintenance. I will never put natural stone flooring in anything going forward.
would any of you guys consider a POLISHED porcelain tile for a
home 2 car garage where simple servicing (oil changes, services, track day prep etc..) is done?
Pros - Looks amazing, lots of refelction
Cons - would be super (readly ouch!) slippery with even a smidge of oil, all dirt and tire marks show up, needs to be cleaned often
.... or am I being too conservative?
Not I. One of the things I love is that it looks great with me doing nothing at all in maintenance. I can't recall the last time I cleaned it other than blowing it out. The other thing is that your polished tile would not be throughboy; if it ever got chipped you would see the chip underneath. Although I have yet to get a chip, if it does, it will look the same all the way through the tile.
Actually, polished porcelain would be through body and would not have a glaze on it. It would be porcelain that would be polished. Like stone is polished, concrete is polished, etc. It is a fairly durable surface but in a garage environment it would scratch up and eventually NOT look polished but probably not everywhere. It would get scratched up in the wear areas, tire tracks, walking paths, tool cart paths, etc. It can be re-polished in place but that isn't generally a DIY option.
Yes, the polished porcelain would be slippery when wet and when covered in oil. I wouldn't want a polished floor in my garage. Even just saw dust on the floor would make it pretty slippery.
Typically, polished porcelain will also be rectified and as near perfect as you can get and that means you go with almost no grout joint (1/16 or so) and it is very tough to install a polished floor and have it look perfect. All your flaws stand out big time!
Whoa. Just learned something. Thanks as usual! When we were recently shopping for porcelain tile for another project, the polished (what I thought was glazed) looked so nice but I wondered how that polish would be last, whether it would scratch up, and how it would be maintained to keep that polish--so we went with a matte finish. For the rest of my stone floors, time to break out the swing machine again...
I know no one has commented here in forever, but this was the most informative thread I've read about flooring. I can tell just joining this site that it is going to be spendy for things I want to do.. Amazing looking floor & garage setup.
