Hello everyone,
I'm currently in the research phase of coating my garage floor.
In another thread ( http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19245 ) I asked at what point in the construction of a new garage should the floor be coated.
now I'm asking WHY everyone adds the "flakes" to their epoxy floor.
Is it:
-purely for aesthetic appeal (just like the way it looks)
-to hide surface imperfections? (cracks, chips, scrapes, pitting, uneven concrete finishing, etc)
-for traction?
-because everyone else adds them, you just thought you were supposed to?
-to help hide UV yellowing of lighter colors and clears?
The reason that I ask is that I'm a mechanic during the day. Our floors are coated at work with plain WHITE (or VERY light grey) solid color. This color choice is more than cosmetic alone.
1. When I drop a nut or bolt or washer or tool or whatever on the floor, the plain white makes it MUCH easier to quickly scan for a lost item. most anything dropped just stands out against the white background. adding flakes to me would seem almost like adding "camouflage" for lost small items.
2. Our current floor (in a 20 year old dealership service dept.) was once almost black from years of heavy use and spills in a completely bare and unprotected state. The day that we came back to work after they epoxied the floors, it was like working with a whole new updated lighting system! the white floors are GREAT for brightening the workplace as they reflect a remarkable amount of light back up from the floor. again, this makes everything easier to see when working. it would seem to me that adding colored flakes (or even using a colored floor other than white or light grey) would absorb light and thus make the shop at least a somewhat darker place. this MAY only be a concern if you are trying to work in the shop, but alot of us do at least hobby work at home too.
I ask because aside from the reason's mentioned above, I simply don't generally prefer the look of the flakes. Don't get me wrong, I've seen some examples here that were quite attractively done. they really gave the floor a more "expensive" or classy look in my opinion. However looking classy wasn't a good enough reason in my mind to override the "functionality" of going with solid white or light grey in a working garage.
Maybe it's just me though as I'm also not a fan of the checkerboard tile theme that appears to be EXTREMELY popular.
so why did/would YOU choose flakes?
-chris
I'm currently in the research phase of coating my garage floor.
In another thread ( http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19245 ) I asked at what point in the construction of a new garage should the floor be coated.
now I'm asking WHY everyone adds the "flakes" to their epoxy floor.
Is it:
-purely for aesthetic appeal (just like the way it looks)
-to hide surface imperfections? (cracks, chips, scrapes, pitting, uneven concrete finishing, etc)
-for traction?
-because everyone else adds them, you just thought you were supposed to?
-to help hide UV yellowing of lighter colors and clears?
The reason that I ask is that I'm a mechanic during the day. Our floors are coated at work with plain WHITE (or VERY light grey) solid color. This color choice is more than cosmetic alone.
1. When I drop a nut or bolt or washer or tool or whatever on the floor, the plain white makes it MUCH easier to quickly scan for a lost item. most anything dropped just stands out against the white background. adding flakes to me would seem almost like adding "camouflage" for lost small items.
2. Our current floor (in a 20 year old dealership service dept.) was once almost black from years of heavy use and spills in a completely bare and unprotected state. The day that we came back to work after they epoxied the floors, it was like working with a whole new updated lighting system! the white floors are GREAT for brightening the workplace as they reflect a remarkable amount of light back up from the floor. again, this makes everything easier to see when working. it would seem to me that adding colored flakes (or even using a colored floor other than white or light grey) would absorb light and thus make the shop at least a somewhat darker place. this MAY only be a concern if you are trying to work in the shop, but alot of us do at least hobby work at home too.
I ask because aside from the reason's mentioned above, I simply don't generally prefer the look of the flakes. Don't get me wrong, I've seen some examples here that were quite attractively done. they really gave the floor a more "expensive" or classy look in my opinion. However looking classy wasn't a good enough reason in my mind to override the "functionality" of going with solid white or light grey in a working garage.
Maybe it's just me though as I'm also not a fan of the checkerboard tile theme that appears to be EXTREMELY popular.
so why did/would YOU choose flakes?
-chris


