Garage Floor Coating Professional Application Polyurea (Kal's Epoxy) | AnthonyJ350
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 พ.ย. 2024
- Want to see how the professionals apply a polyurea floor coating to your garage floor/ shop? In this video we talk with Kal's Epoxy as they walk us through the steps of how a professional floor coating is applied/ installed.
#EpoxyFloor #Polyurea #Epoxy
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Garage Floor Coating Professional Application Polyurea (Kal's Epoxy) | AnthonyJ350
• Garage Floor Coating P...
ANTHONYJ350
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Please do a quick update. It has almost been a year of real world use. I am looking into doing this next month. Thanks
We're actually upgrading the shop, so I'll make an update video and include floor status for you.
my house will be completed in a couple months and i plan on doing this before i move in... i've done my research and polyaspartic/polyurea coating is where it's at... the only con i see from the flakes is when you drop a small nut/washer/etc on the floor, it may be difficult to find, but that's a small gripe... thanks for sharing !
I 100% it is more difficult to find items that fall, and it sound different when they fall. You'll want a good organized work bench to make sure small items stay there.
I've done this for many years as trade work, The company I worked for have redone many other competitors floors due to failures. Hopefully they guarantee their work, I'm really surprised they didn't grind off a layer of the concrete to make sure it adheres properly. We had a guarantee of 15 years, that how confident we were with our work. I hope they also at least sanded down the edges and corners, because that's where we usually saw pealing from competitors floors. Also if the cracks aren't filled properly, such as grinding them out and filling them, they will appear in a few years as cracks through the coating. But none the less the end product looked good!
The floor was grinded a ton when the seal was put on from the first job. All the cracks were filled before the coating was applied.
hey anthony, I need a shop to bleed my clutch and replace the slave and master cylinder for my 350z. do you know any reputable shops that can do that? thanks
There's the Z Shop in Surrey BC.
@@AnthonyJ350 thx man, the clutch on my car feel really heavy. so i hope it resolves this problem when i go to fix it
@@RichardLi-og2lb If the Z Shop is too busy, also try Best Transmission. Hope you get it sorted out!
Hi Uncle! It's me, your nephew.
Hey hey!
@@AnthonyJ350 so hows it doing uncle anthony?
You should cover with polyaspartic 😊
Thanks for the comment
Not grinding that down to bare concrete is a definite fail point. I would be surprised if that does not fail within 5 years or less. Always grind the concrete for best adhering.
Why can't you grind the polyrea that was on there initially? It won't bond to itself?
@AnthonyJ350 You can but that was still shiny which tells me it was barely ground or not fully. You never want to put a base coating on that is not soaking into the concrete itself. Either epoxy or polyurea needs to permeate into the concrete or the product will fail prematurely, guaranteed. A polyurea/polyaspartic floor should last 20+ years depending on traffic and abuse. An epoxy/polyaspartic will last 10+ years depending mainly on temperature and sunlight affecting it. Epoxy does a great job with moisture for install. Polyurea once cured handles all environments better than epoxy, polyurea is temporarily temperamental to moisture before full cure but is way more flexible and stronger than epoxy once cured. Both systems need to be installed to bare, ground concrete.
@@HENSLEYDMB Good to know
@@HENSLEYDMB Are you saying they didn't grind it to a haze? Because I watched them do it.
Comment back in 5 years and we'll see if you're right.
@AnthonyJ350 This is what I do for a living. I own a concrete coating business, we do over 10 million a year in sales so I don't say this without knowledge. It is a total crap shoot if the floor is not prepared properly. From the video here it does not look like the coating was ground to bare concrete? That is what we would have done because I built my reputation on not having to redo floors.