picture of your garage
The following users liked this post:
antwon412 (06-17-2021)
#3617
Rennlist Member
Curious, Why would you not do epoxy again? I have done it in 2 garages and it worked out well. I am working on a new garage now however. What are the issues you had with epoxy and is there something better? I live in Chicago. We get a lot of snow and salt. Curious if the polished concrete is as durable or slip resistant.
#3618
Burning Brakes
Put down ADA slip resistant commercial porcelain tile and don’t worry.
Have tried it all, it’s the best option. Works great with snow/salt.
My garage is covered in crap right now because of this weather.
Have tried it all, it’s the best option. Works great with snow/salt.
My garage is covered in crap right now because of this weather.
#3619
Racer
My girls
#3620
Beautiful garage and looks like very high quality and well thought out. The OCD in me can't stop looking at that TV set up. A flat panel TV mounted on the wood wall with some nice Porsche art on either side and you'd have yourself something special!
#3621
Photos from ~June '18...
Thanks to Mooty and osu s2K...Built a little 4,500sq. ft. shop, with an addition going on the N. side this summer so that I can park my latest hobby: Peterbilt 379. I don't like new Porsches so I am getting into big trucks.
Poured 6-8" last winter CO cold, erected tent over 4,500 ft shop, heated under water for 30 days...Slab is cut in sections, but then filled with something special that is "soft" and malleable (sp?) but the stuff bonds to it like concrete. Polished the floor and Industrial urethaned it multiple times 4? or 6? cannot remember. heated under concrete on one side only where I work in the shop. you cannot see the sections in the floor.
I had a business with 500,000 sq. ft shop 10 years ago and I will never-ever do epoxy again.
Thanks to Mooty and osu s2K...Built a little 4,500sq. ft. shop, with an addition going on the N. side this summer so that I can park my latest hobby: Peterbilt 379. I don't like new Porsches so I am getting into big trucks.
Poured 6-8" last winter CO cold, erected tent over 4,500 ft shop, heated under water for 30 days...Slab is cut in sections, but then filled with something special that is "soft" and malleable (sp?) but the stuff bonds to it like concrete. Polished the floor and Industrial urethaned it multiple times 4? or 6? cannot remember. heated under concrete on one side only where I work in the shop. you cannot see the sections in the floor.
I had a business with 500,000 sq. ft shop 10 years ago and I will never-ever do epoxy again.
#3624
Curious, Why would you not do epoxy again? I have done it in 2 garages and it worked out well. I am working on a new garage now however. What are the issues you had with epoxy and is there something better? I live in Chicago. We get a lot of snow and salt. Curious if the polished concrete is as durable or slip resistant.
#3625
Rennlist Member
I have four garages in epoxy right now. My experience has been it looks great initially, but you have to put too much effort into it to keep it looking good. A lot depends on color. I did three of the garages in a neutral gray and the fourth in metallic (pic below) which looks really cool when its clean. When it chips, it either looks cool (patina) or it looks like the floor needs to be refinished. In my new garage I'm going with diamond polishing. Plus, I'm going for an industrial look with the new garage (I-beams, exposed conduit, etc.) so the diamond polish works well. Wanting lower maintenance and more of "working" garage, not a showroom vibe.
#3626
Rennlist Member
I have four garages in epoxy right now. My experience has been it looks great initially, but you have to put too much effort into it to keep it looking good. A lot depends on color. I did three of the garages in a neutral gray and the fourth in metallic (pic below) which looks really cool when its clean. When it chips, it either looks cool (patina) or it looks like the floor needs to be refinished. In my new garage I'm going with diamond polishing. Plus, I'm going for an industrial look with the new garage (I-beams, exposed conduit, etc.) so the diamond polish works well. Wanting lower maintenance and more of "working" garage, not a showroom vibe.
#3627
I have four garages in epoxy right now. My experience has been it looks great initially, but you have to put too much effort into it to keep it looking good. A lot depends on color. I did three of the garages in a neutral gray and the fourth in metallic (pic below) which looks really cool when its clean. When it chips, it either looks cool (patina) or it looks like the floor needs to be refinished. In my new garage I'm going with diamond polishing. Plus, I'm going for an industrial look with the new garage (I-beams, exposed conduit, etc.) so the diamond polish works well. Wanting lower maintenance and more of "working" garage, not a showroom vibe.
#3628
Rennlist Member
Regarding floor finishes, I seem to remember some posts on this thread by mooty saying that diamond polished and urethane was dangerously slippery when it gets wet. I love the way it looks, but don't want to kill anyone (especially myself)! What have you guys experienced?
#3629
Rennlist Member
My garage is slowly coming along. Wish I could make it bigger! Stupid HOA
#3630
Yes. The day we poured this slab, we used a soft cut saw and cut in joints. 1/8” thickness of relief per 1” of concrete. It’s also important to try cutting in joints to control where it cracks. Keep in mind concrete is always curing and it unfortunately always cracks. Make quandrants of 150 sf increments