hello all,
I have a few questions about racedeck and would like some feedback!
first i have a buisness that we do full custom stereo and interior, motor conversion's and suspension. we have 5 bays and some toolbox space that adds up to about 1500 sq feet. the concrete has been epoxyed before and is showing its age
questions?
1) standing weight ie big toolboxes, jacks holding up a car? can it handle it?
2) leaks? am i going to have a moldy mess under my floor because i didn't clean a water mess up quick enough?
3) this gets used commercially with alot of traffic 20-30 cars a day
is it going to hold up?
4) is the floor going to feel like a floor or does it always move under my feet?
just some questions and would like real world answers
thanks in advance
I did my garage about 6 years ago with the original diamond pattern. Overall, I am pleased and would use it again. I use my garage for lots of heavy-duty home weekend mechanic works – jacking up cars, pulling engines, pulling transmissions, clutch replacements, tunes-up, etc. The only thing the tile does not tolerate well is welding. If the splatter gets on the floor, it melts into it and leaves pock marks. I also use plywood under my jackstands, so the metal ends don’t cut into the tiles.
Other than that, I have used floor jacks directly on it, and have moved lots of heavy stuff across it without issue, such as motors on stands, transmissions on jacks, big toolboxes, cherry pickers, etc. If you drag something heavy across it, you can get shallow cuts/scratches –and I have my share from pushing pallets with nails sticking out etc. I figure those types of things would also scrape up an epoxy or other floor, but at least with the Racedeck you can replace individual tiles pretty easily and cheaply.
Overall, with this type of heavy home use, it has held up pretty well. I’ve replaced a few dozen tiles over the years – mostly the white ones where my project car was dripping fluids over the course of years, and just sat. I’ve also dulled some of the colored tiles by scrubbing them to get off the caked-on grease and grime that had been ground in from pulling motors and the like. In a professional shop, you’d want to make cleaning the floor a regular part of the routine, so the grease and grime doesn’t rough-up and get embedded into the tiles. You can still clean them, but the tiles will not have the new look after.
Regarding your specific questions: (1) big toolboxes/equipment are not an issue at all. (2) fluid can seep through the seams, but not much, and it does have airflow underneath. I put a membrane layer down – like you’d put under a wood floor kit – and it both prevents the fluid from getting to the concrete, but also makes the floor sound better when you want on it. (3) driving/walking on it all day is not an issue – heavy industrial mechanics will accelerate the type of wear I mention above though. (4) feels like a floor, nice and solid and never moves.
Here is a picture of my garage, after 6 years of heavy home use. This picture was taken right after I spent the day hand scrubbing with a brush and replacing a few white tiles -- from the street it still looks new, but close up you can see the wear I mentioned. In a nutshell, it performs as advertised and looks great.