Your garage stores thousands of dollars in vehicles, tools, and who knows what else. Give it some love by installing a protective epoxy floor coating in just a few hours.
An epoxy coating brings the showroom look home, but also serves a functional purpose: it resists oil stains, beads water and is easy to wipe clean. Adding paint chips can hide floor imperfections and anti-skid additives will give you more grip on wet and snowy days. Conversely, if you live in an extremely hot climate, you need to be sure the epoxy can withstand hot tires which can lift the epoxy off the floor.
It's all about the prep when installing an epoxy coating. Regardless of price, an expensive coating can chip and peel if it's not installed correctly. Manufacturers instructions for installing their epoxy can vary, but make sure you still follow every step exactly as listed. Here are the basics steps you'll need to follow, along with a few tips.
Step One: Prep the Space
All objects should be cleared from the floor and the area should be thoroughly swept. Use a leaf blower on low to remove hard-to-see dirt and particles. Tape your baseboards, steps and the edge of your garage floor, to limit where the epoxy covers.
If you have any major chips or damage to your concrete floor, you'll need to repair those first.
Use a heavy-duty degreaser and scrub brush to remove all oil and gas stains from the floor. When you're done scrubbing, rinse all soap and dirt away.
Lastly, apply citric acid and concrete etch, which creates tiny grooves in the floor for the epoxy to adhere too. Some people use muriatic acid, but that is a highly corrosive and toxic chemical. You've been warned.
Give your floor a final rinse with a pressure washer, or just rinse with hose and water, and then wait for the surface to dry completely.
Step Two: Apply the Epoxy
Mix your two epoxy chemicals together and immediately start applying the mixture to your floor. Start with the trim areas first, using a 2" brush, and then cover the floor using a standard paint roller and ⅜" nap. A roller extender is useful for this job.
If you are using paint chips, toss them onto the epoxy after it's been applied to the floor. Do not mix it into the can.
Usually only one coat is required. A gallon should cover 200-250 square feet.
Here's a tip: Don't apply on a windy day or you'll get twigs, leaves and other contaminants blown onto your new floors.
Step Three: Let It Dry
Depending on the temperature and humidity, an epoxy floor will dry to the touch in a couple hours but wait overnight before walking on it.
Epoxy floors need additional time to fully cure. Refer to your product instructions but typical cure time is 3-7 days.
Popular garage floor epoxy kits include Rustoleum for $99 and BEHR for $78.
Photos courtesy of Charles & Hudson.
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