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Friday, 4 September 2009

Shiny New Epoxy Garage Floor

By Eppie G Florence

Pulling onto your own garage floor is like driving onto a auto showroom floor if you lay down a shiny, durable epoxy garage floor. All of the magic of seeing your own car in the reflection on the floor...whether you own an old '76 Buick that's seen better days or a brand new car that tries to outshine the floor. To many, an epoxy garage floor coating is seen as the ultimate in garage flooring, and for good reason. Although extremely time consuming and somewhat difficult to install, epoxy garage floors last a very long time, often as long as the concrete itself. Sometimes a refreshing of the garage floor paint is in order, but generally the initial install is the most work that will need to be done. As opposed to other garage floor coverings, epoxy cannot move or crumple under car tires, and will stay put if you decide to spray it off.

Tough Epoxy Garage Flooring

Extremely tough, epoxy is a very long-lasting coating that is painted onto concrete. Different than normal paint, epoxy will resist grease, oils, and many other things that ruin or plain out dissolve ordinary paints. Regular paint wouldn't be able to handle things like motor oils since they're mostly oil based themselves, which means you need a special type of paint, such as epoxy. This is because when two oil based substances mix, they naturally attempt to combine with each other. This effect causes motor oil and paint to basically be mutually self destructive. Parts cleaner, grease, fuel, power steering fluid, brake fluid...all are petroleum based, and all have the same effect on petroleum based paints. It's actually pretty interesting if you start thinking of just how petroleum based most of our lives' are. That's what's great about epoxy based paints, though. Since they're resin based, they're not susceptible to damage from oil and oil based substances.

Old Epoxy Garage Floors That Shine

Of all the different types of garage flooring, the epoxy garage floor is unique in that it bonds with the concrete at a microscopic level. This means that once the epoxy coating is years, sometimes decades old, it can still be cleaned just like the concrete by itself. The difference is that it doesn't stain since it doesn't absorb the oil based chemicals that are so often found in garages. Since it doesn't stain, it's usually just a matter of power washing the garage floor, if that. Most chemicals will just sit on top of an epoxy coating and can be cleaned up with either a towel, or possibly pushed out of the garage with a squeegee or broom. Be careful, though, that you don't contaminate the earth around your garage with chemicals that, before, you would've absorbed with kitty litter or the like and thrown in the trash. Just because it doesn't damage your garage floor doesn't mean it won't damage the environment, and everything that hits your soil will eventually end up in the groundwater - that's drinking water.

Rainbow Of Garage Floor Coatings

When you think of epoxy coatings, if you have any picture in your head at all, it's probably of a shiny gray floor. It's an awesome color of gray, really it is, but it's still gray. Not that you won't see a huge improvement over the gray of your concrete garage floor, because you will, but some people would much prefer to have some sort of color there instead. For those people, there are various colors of epoxy kits. The only problem is, they're often nearly impossible to find locally. Some hardware stores have been known to tell customers point blank that there is no such thing as colored epoxy kits, which is a blatant lie. Lots of people end up turning to the net to buy their garage floor coating kits, and many times this solution is cheaper than the hardware store anyway. Although buying things online can sometimes be a problem when you need to return something, I don't think that problem would really exist for a garage floor kit.

Will Your Concrete Garage Floor Take An Epoxy Coating?

Maybe. Well, probably. Epoxy does require a lot of preparing, as opposed to just about any other type of garage floor. Some concrete, though, simply can't take a good epoxy coating. Even should your concrete be determined to be in good enough condition to accept a coating, it will have to be cleaned and etched, which is extremely tedious and labor intensive. There's really no method of applying an epoxy garage floor that is for the faint of heart, or faint of back, for that matter. If you're like me, and aren't exactly in the best of shape, you may want to consider something a bit less intensive. Garage floor tiles, for instance, can be started and finished pretty much whenever you like, without regard to time limits and setting times. Small garage floor mats can be moved about when you need to, so sometimes they're all you need. However, if your body or bank account are up to the task, an epoxy garage floor coating just might be for you.

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