I have two large sheds on my property that I am still mulling over what to do with. Each is 36x96, and they are solid aluminum quonsets built during world war 2, at a time when steel was largely unavailable.
The floors themselves look 70 years old because they are. When they were initially poured, it appears that they were hit with a bull float and that was that. As a result, they are fairly rough and uneven, with 3/4 inch variances all over the place. 70 years worth of grain and equipment storage hasn't been real nice to them either.
The cost of replacing the floors are quite high, and I wonder if just covering them with racedeck might be an appropriate and attractive alternative. I've read a number of threads where others have had uneven floors and the recommendation has been to just put race deck over the top of it. Is this really an option for a floor like I am dealing with, or will I need to spend a lot of time grinding and leveling the floor beforehand?
The way I look at it, the cracks, shifting, and settling was all done a long time ago, so I have a very solid base. Rather than disturbing that, is laying a floor on top of it really a viable alternative for something that's this uneven?
The floors themselves look 70 years old because they are. When they were initially poured, it appears that they were hit with a bull float and that was that. As a result, they are fairly rough and uneven, with 3/4 inch variances all over the place. 70 years worth of grain and equipment storage hasn't been real nice to them either.
The cost of replacing the floors are quite high, and I wonder if just covering them with racedeck might be an appropriate and attractive alternative. I've read a number of threads where others have had uneven floors and the recommendation has been to just put race deck over the top of it. Is this really an option for a floor like I am dealing with, or will I need to spend a lot of time grinding and leveling the floor beforehand?
The way I look at it, the cracks, shifting, and settling was all done a long time ago, so I have a very solid base. Rather than disturbing that, is laying a floor on top of it really a viable alternative for something that's this uneven?

