Gents,
It's been a while and I've been a busy guy. I've done a lot to the shop and will be posting MUCH info soon. As for now, I had a member PM me about my Epoxy-coat experience and I wanted to share that first:
PREP:
According to Epoxy-coat, you can sand (80-100 grit) or etch the floor, both are NOT necessary. I chose to sand and mop since my concrete is stain free and about 8 months old. I rented a pad sander from Home Depot and bought 10 sheets of 80 grit. The concrete was not as smooth as I liked, it had trowel marks in many places. The sander took care of that! First I went around and scraped any splatters of dried paint or drywall mud. Then I broomed all the big chunks. As for the actual sanding it took only 3 hours and 8 sheets to get the floor looking great and "baby's ***" smooth. I really liked the results.

The dust wasn't too bad (the sander comes with a "catch bag") but I still wore a respirator/mask. Concrete dust is certainly not good for you and dries out your skin big time.
Immediatley after that I took my shop vac with brush and went to town. I vacuumed the entire floor a few times and all the nooks/crannies. There was still a layer of "chalk" on the floor. I bought one of those industrial mop wringer and bucket deals and "moist mopped" the entire floor. I clean out the water and mop about eight times to make sure that I'm not just putting the dirt back. The floor must be DRY before you epoxy, so I waited till the next morning to epoxy.
I did about 1,000 sqft with the help of one of my "teen slaves"

. I had two "kits" (6 gallons total). I would suggest an extra kit for anyone that's right at the 500 sqft-per-kit limit and lay it on thick! It's an extra $260, but you'll be looking at your floor for a long time!
TOOLS:
Metal paint mixer - the one with the kit is junk and broke.
18" wide roller - lays on the epoxy wide and fast (tray not nec)
Latex gloves - this stuff is sticky
4" roller - for edges
paint pole/broom handle- they give you a squeegee, but no pole.
paper towels & drop cloth
APPLICATION:
I mixed all the grey together (just part A) to make sure the color is the same between batches. Then I mixed three gallons at a time (A 2 gal +B 1 gal). It started to get "sticky" at about 40 minutes, but presented no problems. Two people made this job much easier and quicker, but one can do it.
We started by cutting-in (painting around the perimiter against the walls) with the 4" roller. We then did 10' x 5' areas at at time, otherwise you couldnt throw the flakes far enought to reach every spot! We went heavy on the flakes, I'm hoping it will make it more durable and less slippery (since I didn't add the sand/sillica/grit). The technique is to take the paint can and pour out a line of epoxy and then squeegee it around. Follow up with the roller. This stuff is too thick to just roll on, the supplied squeegee really helps spread it out. At first I was concerned about running out of epoxy and spread it out like paint (thin) that was a mistake (see pictures). As it started to dry, dark areas showed up where the concrete absorbed more epoxy! I was pissed, but it was my fault.
So we started to lay it on thick and the problem went away. I still have a few dark areas to fix, but no big deal. I did 700 sq ft with flake and 300 without (in a different room). The next morning I did a second coat in the room with no-flake epoxy and it looks incredible! I also started to touch up the thin areas in the flaked room, but then I ran out of flakes!!! sheesh. I got more coming.
RESULTS:
All in all, I'm very pleased with the results (so far) and would highly recommend Epoxy-coat. This stuff must be very good because I left the squeegee (with some epoxy on it) sitting on the floor and the next day it was STUCK. I mean I couldnt tear it off the concrete! This stuff "epoxied" the rubber to the concrete. I had to scrape it off
I was walking on the stuff 24 hours later and now it's been 3-4 days, the stuff is rock hard. I'm waiting for the flakes to touch-up the last spots and I'm done. Total time 2 days (6 hours per day, nonstop), Total cost about $750 (2 kits + sander + supplies). That's $2 per sq ft, not too shabby.
I'll be posting a lot of updates soon. I've been busy finishing up and getting ready to move in!!!!