Yeah, and as a contractor I do wish people understood how much time, how many special tools, and how many disposable items go along with it! You can't believe how much Brow Beating we get when quoting a retail price!!!!
@@greg4673 You're nuts. The material alone is close to $2k. Not only that, you couldn't pay me enough to spent 8 hours on my knees grinding 250lbs of coating and dust off a garage floor. Plus the fact that breathing that epoxy and xylene fumes from cleaning your tools will at worst shorten your life and at best melt your brain cells. Find another way to make a living while your still young.
@@greg4673 3 days. grind n prep, thick coating of base coat. blind with flake. Tip, light mist with water to level out vinyl flake. Blow and or vac excess next day. I'm liking 2 pac but moisture cure is fine. 2 uv stable top coats with little 80-120 Carborundum in last coat .
I watched the whole video , I do a lot of my work myself too (Painter/Carpenter) , but I was very impressed with you doing that job alone .... and i too have noticed a very strange thing about Garages .... No matter which way the wind is blowing , it is always blowing INTO the garage , never fails !!!!! lol .... Anyway , tons of respect to you for that job well done ..... ALONE .... You should have heard me when you "stopped and checked your phone" , I yelled "DUDE that craps settin up man !!!!" lol .... But you're all casual about it .... That's a pro
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻excellent!!! I just retired from commercial painting. I started my company 35 yrs ago. I live in southeast alaska on an island. Everything you showed in your how to is years of experience talking. I remember when I first started how I got things wrong. However over the years your learn. My brother and I have a saying “cant buy experience “. I appreciate the time you take to film and show. Yes that product looks to be the best. Thank you for sharing
12 years ago I got brave and did the cheap Home Depot version of this. Wasn't happy with the results and it wore off where the car tires traveled over. You are so right about you get what you pay for.
in addition, good prep is essential. Especially his scoring of the cement under the existing coating. Excellent video. Obviously, earplugs are a must! That mobility cart is cool, knee pads would be good to have during the initial coping work.
The problem with the DIY kits is that they include half the amount used in a professional kit. Plus, they are water-based. So when the water evaporates, you have a surface that's only .25% as thick as a professional kit. That's a fact that they don't explain with those DIY kits. If you want a flake kit, the DIY kit only has 10lbs or so of flake, and a pro kit is 50-100lbs up to 200lbs of flake depending on the Mfg etc.
You just showed how important preparation is for proper adhesion and longevity. You cant stress that enough. I am a bit surprised you used a small hand grinder for such a large area. I have done 2 floor coatings now and both times I rented what looks like a floor buffer with a grinding disc attachment. The grinding disc looks similar to the one on your grinder only larger. I can grind a 1.5 car garage floor in under 1 hour. No need to be crouched down and leaning over. But I do like that wheeled contraption you used. And the floor turned out beautiful. Thanks for the video.
He mentioned at the beginning that his driveway was too long to get his trailer up there. He has probably ground over 100,000 sq. ft. of concrete and obviously did most of that with large grinders. Cheers, Alan Tomlinson
I did a "Flexmar" polyaspartic about 15 years ago in my basement. The 20min pot life was a booger, I would have never attempted it by myself. I had a buddy and we got it done and done right but it was tough. Once you mixed it was go go go. This product looks way easier to deal with.
Back in the late 70’s I worked for a commercial flooring company in Michigan for about 5 years that did an enormous amount of this kind of commercial/industrial flooring mostly in boiler rooms, mechanical rooms in large high rise buildings, fire department equipment areas. For most large areas we mostly used a walk behind scarfire machines, small rooms and inside corners just like you did we used a cabled grinder. One thing we did in like boiler rooms is we flashed the transition between the wall and floor with like a 1” wide 45 degree angle haunch as a seal for moisture. I really like the strip you used on the wall… never saw that before. Great video.
My parents house was built in 1967 and most of the floors were done in a continuous flooring, it was called Targanol I believe, It was an epoxy coating, white first then clear then flakes with different colors for each room. then sanded and coated with two coats of clear, it was very tough after thirty years showed very little wear, but was easily brought to new appearance in wear areas. I was 14 at the time. It is still there and still looks good. Looked very much as this does. That was 55 years ago.
I watched this start to finish as a refresher. I’m a handy-man and my go to is wood work. You did a great job here explaining everything. You showed patients, thanks. I will still be doing an epoxy floor on a porch but peanuts to the work of art on your garage floor ….looks fantastic. I’m here in South Carolina. Humidity now is better than several weeks ago that being said humidity and paint or applying epoxy really makes for trouble. Prep is key, thanks again.
Funny, I came across this product in 1996. The guy was doing this in Quebec and i even did a few jobs with it in winnipeg in 99. all outside work....still stands up to this day!
finally a person on youtube actually grinding the paint off of concrete..... - i work in epoxy resin flooring and it baffles me so many popular youtubers just pour over paint
Like all nice looking jobs, 90% is preparation and 10% is installation. Thank you for showing us just how much goes into a beautiful floor. I think your prices are worth every penny.
Looks great. Back in the 50s they used to put floors like this inside homes. I don't know what type of materials they used then, but they would last forever. You just made the garage floor prettier than my kitchen counters.
That flooring system is called Terrazzo. Only used in airports and people with unlimited funds. About €90/ square foot installed. If you can find the right people.
At that time back concrete flooring type Terrazzo was made from Cement concrete mixed with marble (black;white;hazel;brown) flakes(small cubic partials of marble). After that polishing with machine...very dirty work at that time back 😉🙃🙂😉
I picked up the materials from the store in Allentown in April 2024, and Jason gave me brief information about how to prep and install. After long delays due to my work schedule, I finally started to work on my DIY flooring project. As always, I state this; Prep work is the hardest part of any project you do. Grinding the floor and especially if you are doing cove mortar; that is hell of work and very challenging if you never did before. if you have irregular spacing between drywall and joints, it is very time-consuming. Once I am done with prep, I am confident that the rest of this will be a piece of cake. Some challenges I faced were finding the right rental equipment . If you don't reserve in advance for pro level diamond grinders, it costs double and sometimes not available. Unfortunately, I ended up buying Ryobi angle grinder 4.5 inch with cord. I also purchased Diamond Turbo cup wheel with surface dust shroud attachment and rented Hilti vacuum from Home Depot. It requires a lot of effort if you use hand grinders only. Jason & Jeff are most honest and trusted people in this industry I ever met. Thanks again guys for encouraging us for DIY flooring project. Hope to finish soon with great results.
@@mehmethuyuk8548 Thank you for the great feedback. As always, if you have any questions or need any assistance along the way, please let me know. We are always here to help.
I really appreciate you showing all the details , including cleaning. It really helps us get a realistic idea of everything we can run into and how much time it was take a beginner VS a pro like you! Again! Thank you! 🙏🏽 If I do my floors you are my first choice of system to use!
If you use acetone in a spray bottle and spray the trowel and cove base I think you will be much happier with the amount of ease it puts on doing this type of installation Hope it helps! Good work
This comment is a life saver, the cove was collapsing every pass until I sprayed the trowel with alcohol (half remembering this tip) suddenly went on slick and smooth. So thank you. Also hasten to add that this is easier to work with when you add all the sand and use the above tip, and you seem to get more coverage. Your mileage may vary.
1:04:11 What you also can't see are the small Al2O3 particulate it leaves in the air for you to breathe. You should REALLY use a half face mask while spreading this out. With that said, WOW, what an amazing job you've done with that garage floor. Small details like getting close up to the drains and such all add up to make the overall result that much more appealing. The finish looks absolutely flawless and most importantly, when prepped correctly, will last decades. I can tell you've done a boatload of these because your technique is on point. Great puddle/film management, excellent timing, correct tools and handling, as well as great planning and keeping tidy and positioning everything so as to not impede your work/help you do it more easily. You've optimized the process which makes it easier and faster to do (and lets you get away with things like applying in sections with direct sunlight). Kudos! If I didn't have a tiled garage/driveway/etc, I'd love to get this done. A question I have is: is it easy to squeegee water out like it is on regular polished concrete flooring, or is it pretty grabby?
Sorry for the late delay. I appreciate your comments. This floor is very easy to squeegee. I typically use a wet mop that a janitor would normally use to clean the floor. Very easy to maintain.
I was installing this product years ago when it 1st came out, it is a nice product with tons colors to choose from. However it isn’t cheap and looks very similar to the cheap products most people have seen and used and have had problems with and some people have a hard time believing how much better this polyaspartic is. Ive done garages, shops, locker rooms, concrete floors in buildings, and lots of custom inlay designs from school logo, business logos, car brand logos and patterns. But that was a long time ago and idk how much it has changed the industry tho. Good luck with it and carry on man. And if someone watching this is interested in this product, look it up and check it out. Last a really long time and is very tough.
Excellent tutorial! Your heart and soul is also in that floor but also in your business! May God bless your efforts and may you have a happy life! Best wishes from North Wales.
With over 30 years supervision as a site manager in Australia building clean rooms, laboratories, food processing rooms and abattoirs I have seen many different types of epoxy floors from flake types in laboratories, 6mm high build in clean rooms were finish epoxy was rolled using rake rollers to remove air pockets ,2mm-3mm layers of epoxy paints or 10mm shureshield using multiple sizes of sand and epoxy mix and trowelled on, used mainly to floors were different types of acids and alkaline that can attack the concrete floor to high wear areas ie abattoirs floors were we start with the concrete using 40mpa (I think 7000+psi) strength adding Caltite water proofing to the concrete mix (double the cost of the concrete) then finishing with 3mm-4mm epoxy chips trowelled into the top of the concrete and finished with trowelling machine 3 to 4 times this becomes a hard wearing floor One of the problems we had in high wear areas using epoxy roller types finishes were forklifts would drop there tynes on the epoxy which would break up the epoxy like ( pothole in a road) water would get under the epoxy the forks would push the water like a wedge and the epoxy would come up in sheets The way we did expansion joints was clean the inside edges of the joint with a saw fill the joint with a stiff sand epoxy mix do the floor finish then cut the joint install a backing rod and finish with a good quality joint filler The correct way to do an expansion if the gap is 10mm wide the backing rod is down 10mm making the bottom of the sealant concave up and the top of the joint will concave down this means that in the middle is the thin part of the sealant this allows the joint to stretch without breaking away from the edges
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions I have a quick question, can you apply this? Epoxy to a plywood floor? I have a 14x20 ft steel building with plywood flooring that I am turning into a woodworking shop. Would this epoxy finish be a good choice?
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions I don't believe that'll be a problem because I weigh 386 lb and this floor is 3/4 inch plywood on 24-in centers and it doesn't even move with my weight walking on it.
When my parents had their house built in 1973, they made certain that the foundation where the garage door touches down and outward was 1 inch below the garage floor. Then when the driveway was poured they made certain that it started 1 inch below where the garage door touches. That way there is a 2 inch drop in 2 parts from the garage floor to the driveway. Then the driveway has an 8 inch drop from the garage to the end of the driveway. Water has never gotten past the garage door to the garage floor.
I am curious if the 2 products you used on your garage floor had bad fumes associated with them. My experience with epoxy products is that they have warnings not to breathe in the vapors. You did an expert job on the floor and the results were great. I do have a catalog from Concrete Floor Solutions myself. So many products to fix just about any problem on a concrete floor but also a bit expensive so be prepared for that.
We have the same system in our 4 car garage. I don't know if is the same prep liquid used prior to the flakes, but our entire garage has a faint chocolate smell now...and you can still smell it a year later. Smells great!
Greeat job, great video. Intense detail super well explained. Thank you I enjoyed it so much. I'm never going to have it done, but I watched your video for the entertainment and knowledge. Thanks.😊😊
Wow great work. Doing the poor man's route of a gloss sealer for an external garage. You being very generous with the flakes seems to have helped a lot.
I used a dual component Polyaspartic coating on garage floors for a number of years and found that even if you mixed partial amounts and resealed the cans, the cans could only be opened one more time because the tops would seal to the can and you would have to cut the lids open. It worked well as a sealer but you needed to wear a respirator during mixing and application. And if the cottonwood was blowing ... not fun. If your tires are hot leave the car outside until they cool before parking inside the garage.
Any garage floor coating that you can not park on with hot tires is BS, I would get rid of it or just let it go to shit because if you can't park in your own garage after driving in the summer what good is having a garage.
It`s beautiful, my neighbor had it done by a guy who was good at it like you, he ground the floor with a big machine, but it was $1,300, he was done in 2 days, he gave her a five year warranty, any problems at all and he would fix it, it`s a lot of work involved, looks great.
Good luck with that, for $1300 you can't even purchase the material. He either didn't do the right prep work or used an expensive material. That is actually impossible to do a quality job that price.
SO Beautiful!!! Nice work!! I am curious how this type of floor holds up to someone who works on automobiles and has a lift installed? Also how does it compare to whatever the box store like home depot does on their floors?
These are extremely durable floors designed for working environments. I have a very similar system in my exterior garage with a lift. Here is a link to the video: Experimenting With A No Prep Epoxy Floor On Broom Finished Concrete. Urethane Topcoat Install. th-cam.com/video/IK26uMFgj9M/w-d-xo.html Here is a link to the system I installed: concretefloorsolutions.com/product/500-sq-ft-complete-epoxy-flake-floor-kit/ I almost forgot to mention, these floors are 30 mils thick, big box store epoxy is water-based and put down at 2 mils thick. Our floors are 15 times thicker. Yes they cost more, but you get what you pay for.
I like your delivery. As a solo instructor some of the video issues are to be expected, but given the challenge you did a really good job on the video. You used some terms I was not sure what they meant (I am not in your business a DIYer). Overall a really good job and for my purposes found it to be very helpful. Thank you.
Beautiful floor! It’s a lot of work but worth it, especially if proper procedures can be followed. Like anything, people have to be willing to follow the rules.
Shotblasters don't work too well on Coatings, the shot bounces off it. We have a 480 V shot blaster, but it is too big to work in small areas like that.
Wow you did an amazing job. I know through experience the first time I did this I learned from my mistakes. The prep work and planning is crucial along with decisions on the various options of products to use. Great job!
Thank you. This has been an extremely useful demonstration. I'm grateful that you went over every detail and explained it completely. I'm considering this installation for a locker room floor, by the way because i think i can control the floor friction fairly well.
We had this same flooring, same color professionally installed in our 4 car garage. We love it. I researched cootings in detail before deciding on this, plus it came with a 10 year warranty against cracking or peeling. 2 things I didn't see mentioned (I did skip through the vid). Cracks/divots. Grind them down then fill with a concrete epoxy, then sand down level. The second thing is smell. Our's has a very nice faint chocolate smell...even after a year. We love the coating. Standus up to our large trucks, zero-turns, and is easy to clean. Oil and grease wipe right off. We sweep as needed and every now and then I run a mop over it. It is more expensive, but well worth it if you research it in comparison to standard epoxy flooring. Don't be fooled by the colors and ease to put on....epoxy doesn't last if you drive vehicles over it.
i think if you pulled the bottom sections of the garage door rails off it would be really clean look. I had very rusty bottoms on my door rails so i removed them and cut off about a 1/4" inch, painted them and left them of when they coated my floor. So now they sit above the floor with less of a chance of water wicking up the rails like before.
I'd really like to do that in my garage. The main thing I am not sure about is what I should use to prep the floor. It was previous painted but it is very thin and flaking/peeling off. I'm good using buffers and wood floor sanders so I think I can handle whatever I need to use if I can just figure out what that is and where to get it.
Here is a link to our floor kits:concretefloorsolutions.com/product-category/epoxy-floor-kits/ Prep work is the most important part. You must achieve a clean scratched concrete surface or NO material will bond properly. You can rent a walk behind grinder from your local rental company, or use a hand grinder like I did in this video. All of our floor kits ship for free and we are here to answer any questions you may have 610-972-5247 Jason.
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions Thanks Jason. I will check the rental places to see what they have and will definitely check out your website for more info on supplies.
I've been doing heavy industrial coatings for the last 20+ years and I've done my share of floor coatings I want to say good job installing the floor specially doing it by your self I personally would have done the edges first before doing the field And would have used a mill rake instead of flat squeeze But overall good job man it looks good and professionally done
I am still on the fence about the splash guard. If I have a regular one and I need to affect repairs. I know I can replace a section and it looks good as new. This video needs a companion vid showing how "easy" repairs are.
Thank you so much for showing how it is done, quotes I've had to have my tiny 25 square meter apartment are crazy so your video will certainly encourage me to do it myself! Subscribed, liked and commented!
I always thought there would be some sort of single component eventually. The hardners always gets catalyzed if any air gets to it. How long have you been using this product, and how durable is it?
Working time on this material is excellent. You get approximately 30 minutes of working time, a little longer if it's cooler, a little shorter if it's hot. Recoat time is approximately three hours, again, a little less if it's hot a little more if it's cool. Here is a link to the data sheet for the material. Believe it or not it actually is equal or more durable than most two component polyaspartics: concretefloorsolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/CFS-1C-POLYASPARTIC-technical-data-sheet.pdf Here is a link to the kit: concretefloorsolutions.com/product/500-sq-ft-polyaspartic-flake-floor-kit-1-day-system/ Here is a link to just the clear CFS-1C Polyaspartic:concretefloorsolutions.com/product/cfs-1c-polyaspartic-single-component-polyaspartic-coating/ If you have any other questions, please email me directly jason@concretefloorsolutions.com
How is that a single component??? You have to mix each coat, don't you??? If you have to mix something together, that's not a single component. Unless I'm not understanding what you are talking about???
@@LoveDogs___3 The top coat is a single component material. You open the can and pour it on the floor. The base coat is the same single component material also, but if you want to add color to it, you add the color and stir it in. It is not a Hardner, it is a color. Both single component, no hardners added.
@@LoveDogs___3 Basically... First coat could be applied with no additive, making it a single component product. It sets and cures by itself. Color is simply an allowable additive to achieve the desired look, Color is not needed just wanted. Several components to the complete process used here though :)
Nice job! I just had my garage floor done & its gorgeous. The cove looks great but in watching you, they must hav done it differently bc I can see the bottom of the drywall altho its higher than it was. Its like they cut it. They also used a huge sander that you walk behind. Also, there were a few areas around the perimeter, in front of laundry room door, that hurt to walk on with bare feet. I guess they sanded it down wen they fixed it? I went with Grey/Black bc those are the colors of my house.
Fabulous job and you are a very hard worker and you are very good at what you do so I’m impressed and I know never doing this it wouldn’t turn out as good but you made a really nice detailed video and thank you for sharing
Man, you’re a hard worker. The results are amazing! 🤩 I want to do this in my shop. I might have to rent a connex box first though, I have too much tools (if there is such a thing lol).
You can never have too many tools. The day you get rid of one, you will need it the next day. Thanks for watching, if you are interested in our materials, I will be more than happy to assist you.
I truly hope people can appreciate the level of detail and labor that goes into such a project. Well done.
Yeah, and as a contractor I do wish people understood how much time, how many special tools, and how many disposable items go along with it! You can't believe how much Brow Beating we get when quoting a retail price!!!!
The installation on a two stall should be $2500. That's 1.5 men for 2.0 days average. Or 1 man 2.5 days.
@@greg4673 for material and labor, that sounds about right.
@@greg4673 You're nuts. The material alone is close to $2k. Not only that, you couldn't pay me enough to spent 8 hours on my knees grinding 250lbs of coating and dust off a garage floor. Plus the fact that breathing that epoxy and xylene fumes from cleaning your tools will at worst shorten your life and at best melt your brain cells. Find another way to make a living while your still young.
@@greg4673 3 days. grind n prep, thick coating of base coat. blind with flake. Tip, light mist with water to level out vinyl flake. Blow and or vac excess next day. I'm liking 2 pac but moisture cure is fine. 2 uv stable top coats with little 80-120 Carborundum in last coat .
I would just like to say at 42:49, the clip holding the bucket upside down to get all the material all out....GENIUS!!! Totally stealing that trick.
I couldn't tear myself away. I never got bored watching this.
Holy shit - what a job. I’m exhausted just from watching this. I cannot believe how much work this entails.
Your expertise is frankly amazing. I know many people will want to copy you, but after seeing the level of professionalism I would want to hire you.
Your not in New England right or yeah I would consider having you come and do the work
@@catistrolling7333 No I'm in old England. Specifically Newcastle upon Tyne, which is a city on the North East coast where Hadrian's Wall starts.
I cannot believe one guy did this floor. Impressive and definitely not as easy as he made it look. 👍🏻
I watched the whole video , I do a lot of my work myself too (Painter/Carpenter) , but I was very impressed with you doing that job alone .... and i too have noticed a very strange thing about Garages .... No matter which way the wind is blowing , it is always blowing INTO the garage , never fails !!!!! lol .... Anyway , tons of respect to you for that job well done ..... ALONE .... You should have heard me when you "stopped and checked your phone" , I yelled "DUDE that craps settin up man !!!!" lol .... But you're all casual about it .... That's a pro
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻excellent!!! I just retired from commercial painting. I started my company 35 yrs ago. I live in southeast alaska on an island. Everything you showed in your how to is years of experience talking. I remember when I first started how I got things wrong. However over the years your learn. My brother and I have a saying “cant buy experience “. I appreciate the time you take to film and show. Yes that product looks to be the best. Thank you for sharing
12 years ago I got brave and did the cheap Home Depot version of this. Wasn't happy with the results and it wore off where the car tires traveled over. You are so right about you get what you pay for.
in addition, good prep is essential. Especially his scoring of the cement under the existing coating. Excellent video. Obviously, earplugs are a must! That mobility cart is cool, knee pads would be good to have during the initial coping work.
The problem with the DIY kits is that they include half the amount used in a professional kit. Plus, they are water-based. So when the water evaporates, you have a surface that's only .25% as thick as a professional kit. That's a fact that they don't explain with those DIY kits. If you want a flake kit, the DIY kit only has 10lbs or so of flake, and a pro kit is 50-100lbs up to 200lbs of flake depending on the Mfg etc.
I particularly enjoyed the Easy To Install Single Component-part.
You just showed how important preparation is for proper adhesion and longevity. You cant stress that enough. I am a bit surprised you used a small hand grinder for such a large area. I have done 2 floor coatings now and both times I rented what looks like a floor buffer with a grinding disc attachment. The grinding disc looks similar to the one on your grinder only larger. I can grind a 1.5 car garage floor in under 1 hour. No need to be crouched down and leaning over. But I do like that wheeled contraption you used. And the floor turned out beautiful. Thanks for the video.
He mentioned at the beginning that his driveway was too long to get his trailer up there. He has probably ground over 100,000 sq. ft. of concrete and obviously did most of that with large grinders.
Cheers,
Alan Tomlinson
You are an absolute pro my friend...There is no way in hell I could've done that without taping it all off.
I did a "Flexmar" polyaspartic about 15 years ago in my basement. The 20min pot life was a booger, I would have never attempted it by myself. I had a buddy and we got it done and done right but it was tough. Once you mixed it was go go go. This product looks way easier to deal with.
Back in the late 70’s I worked for a commercial flooring company in Michigan for about 5 years that did an enormous amount of this kind of commercial/industrial flooring mostly in boiler rooms, mechanical rooms in large high rise buildings, fire department equipment areas.
For most large areas we mostly used a walk behind scarfire machines, small rooms and inside corners just like you did we used a cabled grinder. One thing we did in like boiler rooms is we flashed the transition between the wall and floor with like a 1” wide 45 degree angle haunch as a seal for moisture.
I really like the strip you used on the wall… never saw that before. Great video.
My parents house was built in 1967 and most of the floors were done in a continuous flooring, it was called Targanol I believe, It was an epoxy coating, white first then clear then flakes with different colors for each room. then sanded and coated with two coats of clear, it was very tough after thirty years showed very little wear, but was easily brought to new appearance in wear areas. I was 14 at the time. It is still there and still looks good. Looked very much as this does. That was 55 years ago.
Thanks for sharing.
I love your little buggy ,looks like a great back and knee saver.
Where was it purchased
I watched this start to finish as a refresher. I’m a handy-man and my go to is wood work. You did a great job here explaining everything. You showed patients, thanks. I will still be doing an epoxy floor on a porch but peanuts to the work of art on your garage floor ….looks fantastic. I’m here in South Carolina. Humidity now is better than several weeks ago that being said humidity and paint or applying epoxy really makes for trouble. Prep is key, thanks again.
What a amount of work, great job kid!
Beautiful! I have a whole new appreciation and respect for the work that goes into installing flake floor.
Funny, I came across this product in 1996. The guy was doing this in Quebec and i even did a few jobs with it in winnipeg in 99. all outside work....still stands up to this day!
Are you sure? This is epoxy after all! 🤔Not very recommended for outside work .
@@cyberfandvd positive, I still go by some of the jobs every now and again.... and we have northern canada winters
finally a person on youtube actually grinding the paint off of concrete..... - i work in epoxy resin flooring and it baffles me so many popular youtubers just pour over paint
What a great tutorial. Informative and presented in such an easy to understand manner. Great job done by a pro!
Like all nice looking jobs, 90% is preparation and 10% is installation. Thank you for showing us just how much goes into a beautiful floor. I think your prices are worth every penny.
Thanks for watching, appreciate the feedback.
Looks great. Back in the 50s they used to put floors like this inside homes. I don't know what type of materials they used then, but they would last forever. You just made the garage floor prettier than my kitchen counters.
That flooring system is called Terrazzo. Only used in airports and people with unlimited funds. About €90/ square foot installed. If you can find the right people.
At that time back concrete flooring type Terrazzo was made from Cement concrete mixed with marble (black;white;hazel;brown) flakes(small cubic partials of marble). After that polishing with machine...very dirty work at that time back 😉🙃🙂😉
I picked up the materials from the store in Allentown in April 2024, and Jason gave me brief information about how to prep and install. After long delays due to my work schedule, I finally started to work on my DIY flooring project. As always, I state this; Prep work is the hardest part of any project you do. Grinding the floor and especially if you are doing cove mortar; that is hell of work and very challenging if you never did before. if you have irregular spacing between drywall and joints, it is very time-consuming.
Once I am done with prep, I am confident that the rest of this will be a piece of cake.
Some challenges I faced were finding the right rental equipment . If you don't reserve in advance for pro level diamond grinders, it costs double and sometimes not available. Unfortunately, I ended up buying Ryobi angle grinder 4.5 inch with cord. I also purchased Diamond Turbo cup wheel with surface dust shroud attachment and rented Hilti vacuum from Home Depot. It requires a lot of effort if you use hand grinders only.
Jason & Jeff are most honest and trusted people in this industry I ever met. Thanks again guys for encouraging us for DIY flooring project. Hope to finish soon with great results.
@@mehmethuyuk8548 Thank you for the great feedback. As always, if you have any questions or need any assistance along the way, please let me know. We are always here to help.
My son had this done in his 3 car garage and the results were AMAZING.
Excellent tutorial. Narrative, explanation and video work were as good as the final product!
I really appreciate you showing all the details , including cleaning. It really helps us get a realistic idea of everything we can run into and how much time it was take a beginner VS a pro like you!
Again! Thank you! 🙏🏽
If I do my floors you are my first choice of system to use!
If you use acetone in a spray bottle and spray the trowel and cove base I think you will be much happier with the amount of ease it puts on doing this type of installation
Hope it helps! Good work
This comment is a life saver, the cove was collapsing every pass until I sprayed the trowel with alcohol (half remembering this tip) suddenly went on slick and smooth. So thank you. Also hasten to add that this is easier to work with when you add all the sand and use the above tip, and you seem to get more coverage. Your mileage may vary.
It`s fantastic.It`s what I wanted for a floor to my place.I now know how they go about making such a floor finish.Thanks a lot for the video.
The end result is the reward for a lot of back breaking work, if ever you pay someone to do this for you, will know they earned every penny
I loved this video. It was satisfying seeing the Job to it's completion along with the explanation.
Thanks for watching
1:04:11 What you also can't see are the small Al2O3 particulate it leaves in the air for you to breathe. You should REALLY use a half face mask while spreading this out. With that said, WOW, what an amazing job you've done with that garage floor. Small details like getting close up to the drains and such all add up to make the overall result that much more appealing. The finish looks absolutely flawless and most importantly, when prepped correctly, will last decades. I can tell you've done a boatload of these because your technique is on point. Great puddle/film management, excellent timing, correct tools and handling, as well as great planning and keeping tidy and positioning everything so as to not impede your work/help you do it more easily. You've optimized the process which makes it easier and faster to do (and lets you get away with things like applying in sections with direct sunlight). Kudos! If I didn't have a tiled garage/driveway/etc, I'd love to get this done. A question I have is: is it easy to squeegee water out like it is on regular polished concrete flooring, or is it pretty grabby?
Sorry for the late delay. I appreciate your comments. This floor is very easy to squeegee. I typically use a wet mop that a janitor would normally use to clean the floor. Very easy to maintain.
I was installing this product years ago when it 1st came out, it is a nice product with tons colors to choose from. However it isn’t cheap and looks very similar to the cheap products most people have seen and used and have had problems with and some people have a hard time believing how much better this polyaspartic is. Ive done garages, shops, locker rooms, concrete floors in buildings, and lots of custom inlay designs from school logo, business logos, car brand logos and patterns. But that was a long time ago and idk how much it has changed the industry tho. Good luck with it and carry on man. And if someone watching this is interested in this product, look it up and check it out. Last a really long time and is very tough.
Excellent tutorial! Your heart and soul is also in that floor but also in your business! May God bless your efforts and may you have a happy life! Best wishes from North Wales.
Thank you for watching, and the words of encouragement.
With over 30 years supervision as a site manager in Australia building clean rooms, laboratories, food processing rooms and abattoirs I have seen many different types of epoxy floors from flake types in laboratories, 6mm high build in clean rooms were finish epoxy was rolled using rake rollers to remove air pockets ,2mm-3mm layers of epoxy paints or 10mm shureshield using multiple sizes of sand and epoxy mix and trowelled on, used mainly to floors were different types of acids and alkaline that can attack the concrete floor to high wear areas ie abattoirs floors were we start with the concrete using 40mpa (I think 7000+psi) strength adding Caltite water proofing to the concrete mix (double the cost of the concrete) then finishing with 3mm-4mm epoxy chips trowelled into the top of the concrete and finished with trowelling machine 3 to 4 times this becomes a hard wearing floor One of the problems we had in high wear areas using epoxy roller types finishes were forklifts would drop there tynes on the epoxy which would break up the epoxy like ( pothole in a road) water would get under the epoxy the forks would push the water like a wedge and the epoxy would come up in sheets The way we did expansion joints was clean the inside edges of the joint with a saw fill the joint with a stiff sand epoxy mix do the floor finish then cut the joint install a backing rod and finish with a good quality joint filler The correct way to do an expansion if the gap is 10mm wide the backing rod is down 10mm making the bottom of the sealant concave up and the top of the joint will concave down this means that in the middle is the thin part of the sealant this allows the joint to stretch without breaking away from the edges
U need to do a video, if you haven't already.
Gordon, that wasn’t very detailed, could you expound on that more ? 🤪 ( Just kidding, nice job ).
@@Rainman270 Jaja.
@@davidbaldwin1591 Good suggestion.
@@davidbaldwin1591 I was thinking he needs to do a video. %100
Thank you for demonstrating as one person doing the job.
Love the kneely cart. Genius.
Wow! You did a beautiful job! I really enjoyed watching you work...very professional and clean!
You made this look so easy that other videos. I’ll be following this for my garage 🙂
Absolutely love the DG-150 used so many different types over the years with the tile trade but these are so impressive .
Couldn't agree more!
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions
I have a quick question, can you apply this? Epoxy to a plywood floor?
I have a 14x20 ft steel building with plywood flooring that I am turning into a woodworking shop.
Would this epoxy finish be a good choice?
@@ke4uyp Yes, it absolutely would work. The only issue you may have is if the joints move, it may crack on the joints.
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions I don't believe that'll be a problem because I weigh 386 lb and this floor is 3/4 inch plywood on 24-in centers and it doesn't even move with my weight walking on it.
When my parents had their house built in 1973, they made certain that the foundation where the garage door touches down and outward was 1 inch below the garage floor. Then when the driveway was poured they made certain that it started 1 inch below where the garage door touches. That way there is a 2 inch drop in 2 parts from the garage floor to the driveway. Then the driveway has an 8 inch drop from the garage to the end of the driveway. Water has never gotten past the garage door to the garage floor.
Good planning
That flooring should be a given with every new house build! Beautiful look!😊
Great video. Very thorough explanation of the product, the process and details to help out the first timers. Thank you so much for sharing.
Great video, I like how you take your time explaining everything for dummies like me…..
Wow... what a lot of work, what a great professional job!
Beautiful floor!
Wish you lived here in Ottawa Canada. The people that did mine screwed it up ROYALLLLLLY! Great video and well-done sir.
FANTASTIC JOB BUD 👍👍LOVE THE FINISH 👍👍
Bravo--that floor is absolutley gourgous!!!!!
I am curious if the 2 products you used on your garage floor had bad fumes associated with them. My experience with epoxy products is that they have warnings not to breathe in the vapors. You did an expert job on the floor and the results were great. I do have a catalog from Concrete Floor Solutions myself. So many products to fix just about any problem on a concrete floor but also a bit expensive so be prepared for that.
He doesn't need to be prepared, he's the owner.
We have the same system in our 4 car garage. I don't know if is the same prep liquid used prior to the flakes, but our entire garage has a faint chocolate smell now...and you can still smell it a year later. Smells great!
... Simply most therapeutic to watch 🥰😎 🇬🇧🇨🇦
I have a new garage & in one corner rain sweeps in. Even new garage door still happens. So with your video I am confidential I can sand that spot.
Greeat job, great video. Intense detail super well explained. Thank you I enjoyed it so much. I'm never going to have it done, but I watched your video for the entertainment and knowledge. Thanks.😊😊
Wow!!! What a transformation!!!
Beautiful and well explained. Bravo. 👍
The calculation of how much coverage per batch and the amount of time spent grinding are very helpful parts of this video.
Good job and a good teacher
Thank you for watching.
Absolutely beautiful! Love the transformation- never gets old. Your video work is really good
a brilliant job Sir, you worked very hard for a lovely result. cheers from NZ
Wow great work. Doing the poor man's route of a gloss sealer for an external garage. You being very generous with the flakes seems to have helped a lot.
My knees are hurting watching this.
Great presentation! I am happy I paid to have it done by professionals.
I used a dual component Polyaspartic coating on garage floors for a number of years and found that even if you mixed partial amounts and resealed the cans, the cans could only be opened one more time because the tops would seal to the can and you would have to cut the lids open. It worked well as a sealer but you needed to wear a respirator during mixing and application. And if the cottonwood was blowing ... not fun. If your tires are hot leave the car outside until they cool before parking inside the garage.
Hot tires won't be a problem on this material. thanks for watching.
Any garage floor coating that you can not park on with hot tires is BS, I would get rid of it or just let it go to shit because if you can't park in your own garage after driving in the summer what good is having a garage.
@@phillhuddleston9445 agreed 100%, as per the answer above, hot tires are not a problem with this coating.
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions please contact Mr. & Mrs. Ivey per garage floor.
@@davidivey6585 I have no way of contacting you. If you need to contact me please email me jason@concretefloorsolutions.com
It`s beautiful, my neighbor had it done by a guy who was good at it like you, he ground the floor with a big machine, but it was $1,300, he was done in 2 days, he gave her a five year warranty, any problems at all and he would fix it, it`s a lot of work involved, looks great.
Good luck with that, for $1300 you can't even purchase the material. He either didn't do the right prep work or used an expensive material. That is actually impossible to do a quality job that price.
SO Beautiful!!! Nice work!! I am curious how this type of floor holds up to someone who works on automobiles and has a lift installed? Also how does it compare to whatever the box store like home depot does on their floors?
These are extremely durable floors designed for working environments. I have a very similar system in my exterior garage with a lift. Here is a link to the video:
Experimenting With A No Prep Epoxy Floor On Broom Finished Concrete. Urethane Topcoat Install.
th-cam.com/video/IK26uMFgj9M/w-d-xo.html
Here is a link to the system I installed:
concretefloorsolutions.com/product/500-sq-ft-complete-epoxy-flake-floor-kit/
I almost forgot to mention, these floors are 30 mils thick, big box store epoxy is water-based and put down at 2 mils thick. Our floors are 15 times thicker. Yes they cost more, but you get what you pay for.
My Dad did sold and ficdo he had the shoes I didn't know what they were for thank you for a flash back.😀
What is sold and ficdo? I can't say I've ever heard of that.
Outstanding work and great video - so much practical knowledge gained from experience doing these projects!
Audience, Man that looks amazing and that's what I want for my three garages. Kudos🤜🏼🤛🏼✌🏼.
I like your delivery. As a solo instructor some of the video issues are to be expected, but given the challenge you did a really good job on the video. You used some terms I was not sure what they meant (I am not in your business a DIYer). Overall a really good job and for my purposes found it to be very helpful. Thank you.
Beautiful floor! It’s a lot of work but worth it, especially if proper procedures can be followed. Like anything, people have to be willing to follow the rules.
a shot blaster with vacuum works incredibly fast. we use them on bridge decks prior to applying epoxy.
Shotblasters don't work too well on Coatings, the shot bounces off it. We have a 480 V shot blaster, but it is too big to work in small areas like that.
What's a bridge deck???
@@LoveDogs___3 the concrete road surface on a bridge.
Dagon that looks rich !!! It really changed the look of the whole room. Nice job now iam going to see about doing my floor.
Wow you did an amazing job. I know through experience the first time I did this I learned from my mistakes. The prep work and planning is crucial along with decisions on the various options of products to use. Great job!
I want to start my own flooring company. Idk if videos like these will get me prepared enough to start taking jobs and doing them myself
Beautiful work and very informative! 👍🏻👏🏼
Long work u did a wonderful wonderful job do appreciate watching from Toronto
Thank you. This has been an extremely useful demonstration. I'm grateful that you went over every detail and explained it completely. I'm considering this installation for a locker room floor, by the way because i think i can control the floor friction fairly well.
If you have any questions on preparation, materials or installation, please let me know. Jason@concretefloorsolutions.com
We had this same flooring, same color professionally installed in our 4 car garage. We love it. I researched cootings in detail before deciding on this, plus it came with a 10 year warranty against cracking or peeling. 2 things I didn't see mentioned (I did skip through the vid). Cracks/divots. Grind them down then fill with a concrete epoxy, then sand down level. The second thing is smell. Our's has a very nice faint chocolate smell...even after a year. We love the coating. Standus up to our large trucks, zero-turns, and is easy to clean. Oil and grease wipe right off. We sweep as needed and every now and then I run a mop over it. It is more expensive, but well worth it if you research it in comparison to standard epoxy flooring. Don't be fooled by the colors and ease to put on....epoxy doesn't last if you drive vehicles over it.
i think if you pulled the bottom sections of the garage door rails off it would be really clean look. I had very rusty bottoms on my door rails so i removed them and cut off about a 1/4" inch, painted them and left them of when they coated my floor. So now they sit above the floor with less of a chance of water wicking up the rails like before.
I agree, I cut them off 1/2-3/4 of a inch. Easier to clean and do your work. A Zip disk you can easily do them in place
Good tip, thanks for sharing
Wow, nice video. You make it look really easy thanks for sharing all of Your info
I'd really like to do that in my garage. The main thing I am not sure about is what I should use to prep the floor. It was previous painted but it is very thin and flaking/peeling off. I'm good using buffers and wood floor sanders so I think I can handle whatever I need to use if I can just figure out what that is and where to get it.
Here is a link to our floor kits:concretefloorsolutions.com/product-category/epoxy-floor-kits/
Prep work is the most important part. You must achieve a clean scratched concrete surface or NO material will bond properly.
You can rent a walk behind grinder from your local rental company, or use a hand grinder like I did in this video. All of our floor kits ship for free and we are here to answer any questions you may have 610-972-5247 Jason.
@@ConcreteFloorSolutions Thanks Jason. I will check the rental places to see what they have and will definitely check out your website for more info on supplies.
@@garyh4458 Home Depot has them
Outstanding video! You didn't miss a thing, and everything described in appropriate detail.
I've been doing heavy industrial coatings for the last 20+ years and I've done my share of floor coatings
I want to say good job installing the floor specially doing it by your self
I personally would have done the edges first before doing the field
And would have used a mill rake instead of flat squeeze
But overall good job man it looks good and professionally done
I'm still waiting to get to the easy part. Turned out great
I am still on the fence about the splash guard.
If I have a regular one and I need to affect repairs.
I know I can replace a section and it looks good as new.
This video needs a companion vid showing how "easy" repairs are.
Thanks for the share it must have taking a lot of work to get this out Merry Christmas
Thank you so much for showing how it is done, quotes I've had to have my tiny 25 square meter apartment are crazy so your video will certainly encourage me to do it myself! Subscribed, liked and commented!
I give u props for using the hand grinder when u have a large floor grinder at your disposal. 8 hrs extra to prove a point that diyers can do this😮
Shouldn't take more than two to 3 hours with a larger 7 or 9" hand grinder
I always thought there would be some sort of single component eventually. The hardners always gets catalyzed if any air gets to it. How long have you been using this product, and how durable is it?
Working time on this material is excellent. You get approximately 30 minutes of working time, a little longer if it's cooler, a little shorter if it's hot.
Recoat time is approximately three hours, again, a little less if it's hot a little more if it's cool.
Here is a link to the data sheet for the material. Believe it or not it actually is equal or more durable than most two component polyaspartics:
concretefloorsolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/CFS-1C-POLYASPARTIC-technical-data-sheet.pdf
Here is a link to the kit:
concretefloorsolutions.com/product/500-sq-ft-polyaspartic-flake-floor-kit-1-day-system/
Here is a link to just the clear CFS-1C Polyaspartic:concretefloorsolutions.com/product/cfs-1c-polyaspartic-single-component-polyaspartic-coating/
If you have any other questions, please email me directly jason@concretefloorsolutions.com
How is that a single component??? You have to mix each coat, don't you??? If you have to mix something together, that's not a single component. Unless I'm not understanding what you are talking about???
@@LoveDogs___3 The top coat is a single component material. You open the can and pour it on the floor.
The base coat is the same single component material also, but if you want to add color to it, you add the color and stir it in. It is not a Hardner, it is a color.
Both single component, no hardners added.
@@LoveDogs___3 Basically... First coat could be applied with no additive, making it a single component product. It sets and cures by itself. Color is simply an allowable additive to achieve the desired look, Color is not needed just wanted. Several components to the complete process used here though :)
@@LoveDogs___3 Fumd Duck
Awesome video and finished product!! Thanks!
it's about time somebody brought that coating back my dad had that put down in his garage in 73 and it still looks good
#1 Wow, this stuff really covers.
#2 This guy makes it look easy. It's a little more difficult to get it just right
You did a great job l really loved it
Well done doing the coving I do a lot of epoxy coving :) and have been working with epoxy and PU for the last 29 years
Thank you, we offer contractor discounts and free shipping. email me directly if you are interested. jason@concretefloorsolutions.com
great video and beautiful job!
great
me, not knowing anything, thinks its a bit too gritty, but marvelous work, thank you for the time, effort and care.
thanks
My gosh 😅
I wish you were in the Uk 🇬🇧..
Staffordshire..
Love this exact finish in my garage..
Top trades man 10-10
Nice job! I just had my garage floor done & its gorgeous. The cove looks great but in watching you, they must hav done it differently bc I can see the bottom of the drywall altho its higher than it was. Its like they cut it. They also used a huge sander that you walk behind. Also, there were a few areas around the perimeter, in front of laundry room door, that hurt to walk on with bare feet. I guess they sanded it down wen they fixed it? I went with Grey/Black bc those are the colors of my house.
If the drywall wasn't firmly attached to something all along the bottom, then they did the right thing IMO.
Fabulous job and you are a very hard worker and you are very good at what you do so I’m impressed and I know never doing this it wouldn’t turn out as good but you made a really nice detailed video and thank you for sharing
Man, you’re a hard worker. The results are amazing! 🤩 I want to do this in my shop. I might have to rent a connex box first though, I have too much tools (if there is such a thing lol).
You can never have too many tools.
The day you get rid of one, you will need it the next day.
Thanks for watching, if you are interested in our materials, I will be more than happy to assist you.
43 seconds in it is already not "easy to install."
Cove sucks but easy once you do a few. After about 20 jobs you can almost do it blind but the fist 10 are always fails lol
I see nothing about this that’s “easy”
I would love it if he'd come and do this to my garage & basement floor in NC.
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It really is a fine job with an excellent finish.