New Garage Floor - What To Do?

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dishdude

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I am about to close on a new construciton house that has a concrete garage floor. The house is brand new, and before I start driving on it I was thinking of sealing the concrete, or using a garage floor epoxy paint on it. I have not had much luck in the past with paint as it seems to flake and come up easily.

Suggestions?
 
I mention the following site too often, but here goes.....visit the garage journal site. They have and entire forum section on garage floor finishes. Plan on several days of thread reading on the pros and cons of about a dozen different options.

You will be sorry to even begin pondering this!

Best of luck.
 
I vote to leave it plain concrete and buy a few bags of oil-dry. Is it a real working garage if the floor is pristine? Its like the person I knew who had a basement of wood working tools and no saw dust.
 
Oh, come on Donald. Wouldn't you love to have your skid steer sitting on this nice shiny floor in place of this car?
grin2.gif

epoxy-garage-floor-installation-rockford.gif
The floors in my home don't look this good!
 
Allow the concrete to cure for 3-6 months or you will have issues with it. You can speed curing by wetting the floor with a hose and allowing it to air dry multiple times.
 
Originally Posted By: Donald
Is it a real working garage if the floor is pristine?


The floor of my shop is epoxied and kept very clean. I have a lift and I work on all sorts of equipment including 4 Ford tractors, all of which have been rebuilt from the ground up.

The floor in the photo is as dirty as it ever gets after working on a friends pickup, I both mop and clean it regularly.

So yes, it is a real working garage if the floor is pristine. I can highly recommend to the original poster to consider using epoxy to coat the floor after the concrete has aged appropriately. It gives the entire garage a clean feel, and its nice to be able to kneel or sit on the floor and not get dirty.

Shop2.jpg
 
Originally Posted By: doitmyself
I mention the following site too often, but here goes.....visit the garage journal site. They have and entire forum section on garage floor finishes. Plan on several days of thread reading on the pros and cons of about a dozen different options.

You will be sorry to even begin pondering this!

Best of luck.


+1

There are drawbacks like hot tires peeling the coatings off.

You are thinking about it at the right time though before dripping grease or whatever on that virgin concrete.
 
I painted my garage floor with epoxy and really like the results. I've got only workbenches, toolboxes and woodworking machinery in there (no cars...that's another story), but being able to clean it, and find dropped objects, makes the painting well worthwhile. I don't remember the brand of paint, but they claimed it would not lift under hot tires once it's cured.
 
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Don't do it. The coatings don't hold up. Especially on new concrete.

H+C concrete stain is horrible. It dissolves in any solvent. Peels up and lasts about a week.

The better epoxies hold up much longer. But, it is still the same, maintenance intensive situation after a period of time. You will eventually spend time or money or both "fixing" it.

My current house, 10 years old, does not have a coating, and does not need one. I've spent Zero time/money "fixing" the garage floor.

My previous house (owned 11 years) had various coatings. I spent way too much time dealing with that garage. I'll NEVER do that again.
 
I painted my garage floor 7 years ago with Rust Oleum Professional Epoxy Coating. (not to be confused with Rust Oleum Garage Floor Paint. It is not the same as the the Professional Epoxy coating.)

The concrete was new. I cleaned that floor with tri-sodium phosphate, muriatic acid (to give the paint a rough surface to adhere to.), and then heavy duty scrubbed with an electric floor scrubber using water over and over again. I then let it dry for 5 days.

After I painted the floor, I kept everything off the floor for another week.

7 years later: no tire lifts, no cracking or peeling. The floor looks as good today as the day I painted it. I live in Minnesota where the floor is subjected to salt and sand. I do have a heated garage with hot and cold water, so I am able to wash my cars there all winter long and wash the floor clean periodically.

My opinion only, but coating that floor was the best thing I ever did. You may think a plain concrete floor cleans up nice, but an epoxy coated floor cleans up the easiest. Any small oil spills clean with a wipe of the rag. Never had one issue - just a lot of compliments.

Proper preperation is the key to a long lasting coating.

Good Luck!

757 Guy
 
Originally Posted By: doitmyself
Oh, come on Donald. Wouldn't you love to have your skid steer sitting on this nice shiny floor in place of this car?
grin2.gif

epoxy-garage-floor-installation-rockford.gif
The floors in my home don't look this good!


Do you really think that looks better than the 2" or 3" pile of oily oil-dry around my skid steer soaking up the hydraulic fluid that leaks?
 
Originally Posted By: Cujet
Don't do it. The coatings don't hold up. Especially on new concrete.

H+C concrete stain is horrible. It dissolves in any solvent. Peels up and lasts about a week.

The better epoxies hold up much longer. But, it is still the same, maintenance intensive situation after a period of time. You will eventually spend time or money or both "fixing" it.

My current house, 10 years old, does not have a coating, and does not need one. I've spent Zero time/money "fixing" the garage floor.

My previous house (owned 11 years) had various coatings. I spent way too much time dealing with that garage. I'll NEVER do that again.


Hogwash. When it's done right it wears like iron.

I can't speak for H+C concrete stain, but the epoxy in the photo above is..13 years old now? 14 maybe? I did it a couple years after I built the shop which was 1995. Doing the math I realize it's closer to 15 years old.

I drive chained up tractors (Ford N with loaded tires) on it in the winter, I pull in snow/ice/sand/salt covered vehicles and the snow/sand/ice/salt melts onto the surface, I've spilled just about every automotive chemical and fluid known to man on it. I have pulled countless vehicles in with hot tires in the summer with no problems whatsoever. Everything wipes up or mops up with a paper towel. When I do spill something sticky, or clean under the lift (spilled fluids mixed with dust and dirt) I dump mineral spirits directly on the floor, let it work for a few minutes, and use a sponge mop to mop it up. Again, never a single issue with the coating. The light color makes the shop a great deal brighter, and I can sit or lay directly on the floor without getting dirty.

The key is using a quality product, following the directions to a "T", and making certain the concrete isn't already sealed or wicking moisture through the surface. If you do it right the results are great.
 
The shop I used to work at epoxy coated floors...I'm trying to remember the brand of the stuff. The owner did it all himself and I think he bought it at Menards if I remember right. He coated the floors in 2005, and that floor has seen a lot of use since then. Lots of weight, parts falling, torched metals/plastic chunks, etc...and it still cleans up pretty decent. Theres a few chip in spots, where something heavy fell and chipped the concrete. Otherwise, considering the abuse it has seen, I'd say its held up very well. I've been considering coating the garage at my dad's place where I work.
 
Epoxy works well if..............the concrete is totally cured, free of oil, concrete dust, dirt, and moisture free. Make sure you check off on all of the above before coating the floor.
 
Originally Posted By: demarpaint
Epoxy works well if..............the concrete is totally cured, free of oil, concrete dust, dirt, and moisture free. Make sure you check off on all of the above before coating the floor.


Do you hit the floor with a grinder? Acid etch?
 
Originally Posted By: yucca
Originally Posted By: demarpaint
Epoxy works well if..............the concrete is totally cured, free of oil, concrete dust, dirt, and moisture free. Make sure you check off on all of the above before coating the floor.


Do you hit the floor with a grinder? Acid etch?


This might help with some of the basics for prep. I'd stay clear of the grinder.

http://www.seal-krete.com/epoxyseal_prep.htm
 
Originally Posted By: 2Fast4U
Here is mine I did myself. This was a few years back and I was painting walls at the time.

PICT4965.jpg


Looks good
thumbsup2.gif

This is what I would like to do to my garage, what did you use for the floor?
 
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