v10enomous
Enthusiast
The hot tires make love to the epoxy as they cool down then when you drive away in the morning the tires want to hold on to the epoxy.
... and alcohol is almost always involved
The hot tires make love to the epoxy as they cool down then when you drive away in the morning the tires want to hold on to the epoxy.
Well I paid the big bucks for UCoat-it and it still lifted in a few spots, after a few years. If I had to do it again, I would have just gone down to a Commercial Flooring store and bought the cheapest, yet strongest stuff they make. Slap it on real thick and call it good.
Not sure that helps you but then again I did not have a good experience. I washed and scrubbed the damn floor for a full week before I laid everything down so it just upsets me. My father in law put on the cheapest stuff from Home Depot and I am not sure my UCoat-it held any better than the $50 package he put down. $50 did not even cover the tax I paid for the UCoat-it.
In the end, I don't think it matters. It is all in the prep and prep and prep.
I tried all the various epoxy and paint products out there with professional installation in my 3 car dealerships and finally went to porcelain tile. Stands up to any stain and all floor jack and shop abuse. My service areas look outstanding and are very easy to maintain. I put it in my own garage myself working afternoons only for 3 weeks covering 3350 sq. ft. Cost was $4500.00 or about $1.40/sq.ft. plus my labor. I just dry mop off any dirt tracked in by wet tires. It's some work but I must say that the dealerships and my garage after 3 yrs sill look perfect. I highly recommend it. PM me if you need more info or tips. There was no prep over the raw concrete necessary except for some very simple treatment over the cracks in the original concrete. I really don't think it takes any longer than epoxy or paint if you figure in doing the proper concrete prep work for the epoxy or paint. Be sure to use porcelain not ceramic tile. Porcelain tile is about 20 times stronger and much more resistant to chipping or scratching. That's my .02$ worth after a lot of trial and error---Dave