I could use some advice of my garage floor:
I have a couple problems that could have separate solutions.
1) I have a 2 car garage. It appears to have been poured in 2 halves with a seam down the middle. The one floor sank a little at the front such that there’s a tapering step from around 1” to nothing at the back. Subsequent owners tried to make a concrete ramp. It’s not great because I’d like to put a tool box there between the cars.

Wondering if it’s possible to grind the high side down one inch to match the other, or if some sort of self leveling pour would make more sense?
2) The side that has sunk is also badly spalled. These floors could easily be 100yrs old. I just spent an hour with my low speed floor polisher with a diamond wheel. It’s smoother, but not flat. I had my main floor professionally ground. It wasn’t crazy money and came out great, but it was a new slab.

I guess this is my question. Rather than trying to grind down the damaged sections, I wonder if I can fix what I have with self leveling, even if I grind to blend it all together afterwards?
I have a bunch of thoughts regarding the top surface. Could epoxy it, or use a PVC roll coin dot. I just need a substrate that is strong enough for a car jack and jack stands. Are there topping materials strong enough?
Last, the other option is to nuke this floor, dig it out and start over. I’ve done this before and it’s a big big job, that may involve structural repairs to the building above it

This looks smoother than it is. I try to wet grind and the muddy swarf kinda fills the low spots. Until I hose this out I won’t really know how smooth it really isn’t.
I have a couple problems that could have separate solutions.
1) I have a 2 car garage. It appears to have been poured in 2 halves with a seam down the middle. The one floor sank a little at the front such that there’s a tapering step from around 1” to nothing at the back. Subsequent owners tried to make a concrete ramp. It’s not great because I’d like to put a tool box there between the cars.

Wondering if it’s possible to grind the high side down one inch to match the other, or if some sort of self leveling pour would make more sense?
2) The side that has sunk is also badly spalled. These floors could easily be 100yrs old. I just spent an hour with my low speed floor polisher with a diamond wheel. It’s smoother, but not flat. I had my main floor professionally ground. It wasn’t crazy money and came out great, but it was a new slab.

I guess this is my question. Rather than trying to grind down the damaged sections, I wonder if I can fix what I have with self leveling, even if I grind to blend it all together afterwards?
I have a bunch of thoughts regarding the top surface. Could epoxy it, or use a PVC roll coin dot. I just need a substrate that is strong enough for a car jack and jack stands. Are there topping materials strong enough?
Last, the other option is to nuke this floor, dig it out and start over. I’ve done this before and it’s a big big job, that may involve structural repairs to the building above it

This looks smoother than it is. I try to wet grind and the muddy swarf kinda fills the low spots. Until I hose this out I won’t really know how smooth it really isn’t.
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