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Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
#9012064
02/27/24 03:49 PM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 41,366
J.G.
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OP
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My shop is 40' X 60'. My south door opening is 16' W X 16' T. That's the door the truck, tractor, skid steer comes into. When I'm servicing or repairing, of course I spill oil, diesel, and hydraulic fluid. Absorbent, and then scrub the floor with an aggressive brush and pump gas. It takes a while to clean. I'm thinking about am epoxy that would make that clean-up easier. I do not want any grit in it. My floor is a power trowel smooth finish. And I'd like to keep it that way. I'll probably be putting a coating on 16' W X 30' long.
I have not looked into brands or models.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012072
02/27/24 04:11 PM
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Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 6,404
Blank
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You say epoxy, but hope that's just a generic reference. Polyurea is a better choice than epoxy. Dries faster, fully hardens quicker, and is easier to top coat and/or repair. Epoxy is hazardous to apply and fumes are terrible. Either one should have some non skid added, cause when wet you will slip and bust your azz! You want to use on your heavy equipment side, and epoxy takes up to a month to fully cure and harden. Once hardened tho, it can be more brittle and chip under rocks and heavy loads. Either one will run $50-60/gal for quality product. Best bet is to talk to a pro, and get a bid either way
Beer and whiskey, 'cause you can't drink bacon!!
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012073
02/27/24 04:13 PM
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Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 8,705
freerange
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Gonna hafta keep those dogs off it while it dries........
At some point in life its time to quit chasing the pot of gold and just enjoy the rainbow. FR Keep your gratitude higher than your expectations. RWH
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: Blank]
#9012136
02/27/24 06:09 PM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 9,949
The Dude Abides
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Posts: 9,949 |
You say epoxy, but hope that's just a generic reference. Polyurea is a better choice than epoxy. Dries faster, fully hardens quicker, and is easier to top coat and/or repair. Epoxy is hazardous to apply and fumes are terrible. Either one should have some non skid added, cause when wet you will slip and bust your azz! You want to use on your heavy equipment side, and epoxy takes up to a month to fully cure and harden. Once hardened tho, it can be more brittle and chip under rocks and heavy loads. Either one will run $50-60/gal for quality product. Best bet is to talk to a pro, and get a bid either way This right here! I have polyurea on my garage floor.
I am still looking for the perfect apron, one with reinforced knee areas would be perfect.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012145
02/27/24 06:31 PM
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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 4,628
TPACK
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This is what I used to buy for the plant I worked at. No Idea what it cost anymore. I know it wasn`t cheap the last time I bought it, but you get what you pay for.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012150
02/27/24 06:55 PM
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Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 4,584
Gumbeaux
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Had a garage with no grit and it got SLICK when it was wet. That was 15 years ago so things may have changed but a little grit is probably not a bad idea.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012157
02/27/24 07:03 PM
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Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 10,732
Greg
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Be sure to clean & etch the floor real good before you apply the epoxy. Makes a big difference in how long it will last.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012165
02/27/24 07:27 PM
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Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 5,808
MeanGreen85
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Epoxy will not last, even with perfect surface prep. Spend the money and get a professionally installed polyurea coating as Blank suggested.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012174
02/27/24 07:47 PM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 32,172
txtrophy85
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I used the Quickcrete epoxy with the flakes. Easy to do and does not change the finish. No grit, smooth surface other than the minor flake texture. ( it helps even the look). 5 years old and zero issues with wear or traffic spots
For it is not the quarry that we truly seek, but the adventure.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012181
02/27/24 07:59 PM
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Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 22,821
BigPig
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It’s all temporary and with the grit from your road, your truck, tractor, and especially the skid steer will destroy it quickly.
I works in a shop that had it professionally sprayed and we only had up to ambulance sized/weighted vehicles in there and it ate it up. We attempted our own coating next, and those results were very poor. We then stripped the floor and acid etched it, sprayed a hard setting bedliner (LineX style) to the floor and it held the best bit was very expensive, and eventually failed due to turning the front tires.
Your best bet is to semi annually treat the concrete with sealer in the main areas you’ll be performing vehicular maintenance
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: BigPig]
#9012219
02/27/24 09:48 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 15,638
reeltexan
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It’s all temporary and with the grit from your road, your truck, tractor, and especially the skid steer will destroy it quickly.
I works in a shop that had it professionally sprayed and we only had up to ambulance sized/weighted vehicles in there and it ate it up. We attempted our own coating next, and those results were very poor. We then stripped the floor and acid etched it, sprayed a hard setting bedliner (LineX style) to the floor and it held the best bit was very expensive, and eventually failed due to turning the front tires.
Your best bet is to semi annually treat the concrete with sealer in the main areas you’ll be performing vehicular maintenance This is what I've been thinking. That stuff will come up after a few years and enough traffic. And it's expensive.
"If we ever forget that we are One Nation Under God, then we will be a nation gone under." Ronald Reagan
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: BigPig]
#9012327
02/28/24 01:06 AM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 5,224
LonestarCobra
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It’s all temporary and with the grit from your road, your truck, tractor, and especially the skid steer will destroy it quickly.
I works in a shop that had it professionally sprayed and we only had up to ambulance sized/weighted vehicles in there and it ate it up. We attempted our own coating next, and those results were very poor. We then stripped the floor and acid etched it, sprayed a hard setting bedliner (LineX style) to the floor and it held the best bit was very expensive, and eventually failed due to turning the front tires.
Your best bet is to semi annually treat the concrete with sealer in the main areas you’ll be performing vehicular maintenance This^^^^^^ I have been down this road myself.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012562
02/28/24 04:44 PM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 41,366
J.G.
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Thank yall for the replies.
I've got a good idea now what to do. Before I seal it, I need to figure out what to do to get the oil stains out of the concrete.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012591
02/28/24 05:41 PM
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Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 12,279
wp75169
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Posts: 12,279 |
Thank yall for the replies.
I've got a good idea now what to do. Before I seal it, I need to figure out what to do to get the oil stains out of the concrete. Someone recommended gasoline which I’m afraid of, diesel, not so much. It will do the job.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: wp75169]
#9012597
02/28/24 06:07 PM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 41,366
J.G.
OP
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OP
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Posts: 41,366 |
Thank yall for the replies.
I've got a good idea now what to do. Before I seal it, I need to figure out what to do to get the oil stains out of the concrete. Someone recommended gasoline which I’m afraid of, diesel, not so much. It will do the job. Read the first post. I've used gasoline many times. But the concrete is not 100% clean.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012609
02/28/24 06:35 PM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 10,072
unclebubba
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I have yet to find anything that will get concrete completely clean. If you find something, please post about it.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: unclebubba]
#9012610
02/28/24 06:40 PM
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Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 904
TKM
Tracker
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Tracker
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Posts: 904 |
I have yet to find anything that will get concrete completely clean. If you find something, please post about it. From running pool water down my driveway, Muriatic acid (hydrochloric acid) or a couple pounds of shock in a 5gallon bucket with some water cleans mine right up. Of course, let the acid sit to long and it will leave nothing but sand where the concrete used to be.
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012613
02/28/24 06:54 PM
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Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 773
machinist
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Tracker
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Take dry concrete not redi-mix but just dry concrete and put it on the spots and let them set for 3 or 4 of days before you sweep it up. Then do it again if it needs it. I spent a few years in auto shops and we would seal the concrete every 2 years. The sealer wasn’t as slick as epoxied floors.
Last edited by machinist; 02/28/24 06:55 PM.
some people like silver and gold I like brass and lead with a little powder in between
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012725
02/28/24 10:57 PM
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553
Superduty
"The Regulator"
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"The Regulator"
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553 |
Grind concrete, fill cracks and crevices, use a vapor barrier, epoxy coat, then a polyaspartic and you can add as much grip to the polyaspartic as you wish for no slips and falls.
Last edited by Superduty; 02/28/24 10:58 PM.
'It's Only Treason if You Lose."
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: Superduty]
#9012740
02/28/24 11:30 PM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 41,366
J.G.
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OP
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Grind concrete, fill cracks and crevices, use a vapor barrier, epoxy coat, then a polyaspartic and you can add as much grip to the polyaspartic as you wish for no slips and falls. Thass high roller talk!
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012760
02/29/24 12:02 AM
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553
Superduty
"The Regulator"
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"The Regulator"
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553 |
Grind concrete, fill cracks and crevices, use a vapor barrier, epoxy coat, then a polyaspartic and you can add as much grip to the polyaspartic as you wish for no slips and falls. Thass high roller talk! My bad,…. How about, just paint it. Haha.
'It's Only Treason if You Lose."
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Re: Educate me on DIY shop floor epoxy.
[Re: J.G.]
#9012764
02/29/24 12:03 AM
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Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553
Superduty
"The Regulator"
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"The Regulator"
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 22,553 |
'It's Only Treason if You Lose."
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