View Full Version : Garage Floor Finishing Ideas
Halon
09-17-2010, 08:39 PM
I've been cleaning my garage up, and well one of these days I really want to do something about my gross floor. I've considered using garage floor pain, but my floor has a lot of small chips in it all over, a small crack, so I've always wondered how paint would turn out. Plus the floor is fairly dirty/greasy, so it'd need a hard core cleaning which I'm sure I'd have to pay someone to do which I'd rather not do. Plus you need to wait a long time for it to dry, and I don't want everything just sitting in my driveway for a week.
Someone once told me about some sort of garage tiles that you can lay down. Self-adhesive tiles, and you just stick them down 1 by 1. Anyone ever used those before? How do they hold up to jack stands? Cherry pickers rolling around? Oils and chemical spilled on them?
Just looking for some ideas I guess. Thanks.
TkrPerformance
09-17-2010, 09:32 PM
I have the peal and stick 12x12 black and white tiles in my basement. they are not that thick and jack stands would go through them
GREASEMONKEY
09-17-2010, 10:07 PM
They sell a coating made just for garage floors that works awesome, There are kits like this one:
http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051&productId=100014550&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=100014550&cm_mmc=shopping-_-googlebase-_-D24X-_-100014550&locStoreNum=2807&marketID=101
Or they sell just the coating itself at home depot, Or like bumper 2 bumper, etc..
This stuff works the best IMO, Tiles will crack and chip. The kits they sell come with a degreaser / cleaner that you can just put in your pressure washer tank and blast away. Or you can buy them separately as well.
If you want durability and a semi good looking garage floor this is the way i would go.
-Stephan
turbotalon1g
09-18-2010, 12:14 PM
You've seen my place its the stuff at menard's was fairly cheap too.
Speedfreak
09-18-2010, 01:02 PM
Saw these garage floor mat at Sam's Club, looked interesting for a garage. May be a good option for you.
http://www.samsclub.com/sams/shop/product/templates/samsShop_productTypeIndex.jsp?altQuery=&searchTerm=&rootDimension=1001064+4294956419&brand=&searchCategoryId=1064
Halon
09-22-2010, 11:30 PM
Thanks for the comments! I've decided to just try the floor paint/epoxy like a couple of you suggested. I purchased all my stuff from Lowe's. I'll post up some pics of the progress in case it helps anyone else in the future. My digital camera has apparently been ganked so I need to get a new one, and will then share the pics.
Here is what I bought from Lowe's today:
- Rust Oleum 1-stall epoxy paint kit which include ($65):
2 part paint mixture
flakes for sprinkling on the floor
etching acid
- 1 packet of friction powder to mix with paint
- 1 Gallon of cement degreaser
- cement repair goop
- cheap plastic disposable putty knifes for the cement goop
- 1/2" nap rollers
- roller and extension
- cheap disposable roller pan
- stiff brissle broom
Total bill was $120. I am borrowing the pressure washer for free from my uncle.
Basically here is the process I'm going to follow:
1) Degrease & pressure wash the cement floor. Let it dry overnight.
*COMPLETED*
2) Repair any cracks/chips with some cement repairing goo. Allow to dry for 24hrs.
*COMPLETED*
3) Etch Cement using etching acid and stiff brissle broom.
*COMPLETED*
4) Pressure wash (no degreaser, just water) a couple more times to try and clean out any etching acid that may still be down in the pores of the cement Allow 24hrs to dry.
*COMPLETED*
5) Mix together the paint (I also got some friction powder to mix in which is supposed to help keep it less slippery). Apply 1 coat of paint to the floor.
*COMPLETED*
6) While paint is still wet, sprinkle the flakes that came with the Rust Oleum paint kit
*COMPLETED*
7) Allow several days to dry/cure before driving on.
Something to add is that I have a 2 stall garage, and live in a townhouse complex. The association would prolly blow their lids if I moved all of my garage contents into the driveway for a week. So for now I am just doing half of the garage (which is why i only bought the 1 stall kit mentioned above). I've moved everything to one side of the garage, and will just be doing one half. Once that half is done, I'm unsure if I will do the other half immediately, or wait until summer to do the other half. To complete the other half, I already have degreaser and the cement repair goo. So all I will need to but is another $65 paint kit, and some cheap putty knifes and a roller pan and rollers and I'll be good. In the end should total out to about $200 all said and done.
So, as of today Step 1 is complete. I used the degreaser and pressure washer, and got a good cleaning done of half the garage. Will get some pics once I get a camera. It's not perfect, but as good as this old garage floor gets I think.
asshanson
09-22-2010, 11:55 PM
Nice, what are the advantages to this epoxy paint stuff? Easier to clean up spills and such?
Halon
09-23-2010, 12:13 AM
exactly. Cement absorbs stuff, making it stain easy, and hard to clean up or keep clean. With the epoxy coating, you just wipe stuff of with a clotch, or a mop. Makes clean up way easier.
asshanson
09-23-2010, 12:14 AM
Nice, I may have to do this since it's brand new bare cement here and my dumb motor mount even put a stain on the floor that sucked to get out. Would be easy since there is no repair work, just etch and coat.
Halon
09-23-2010, 12:17 AM
I've "heard" coating new cement may not be the best idea since it still has moisture in it. I have no experience to prove that, just what I've heard. Apparently it's a good idea to wait a couple years before coating it.
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