Pearldrummer7
11-11-2019, 09:24 AM
Hi all--
I have a large garage/shop/basement (~1,500 sq ft of unfinished basement with HVAC and plumbing attached to ~780 sq ft of garage) under the house. I epoxyed the floor (in a few stages, as money, time,. storage allowed), I also painted the walls. Figured I would give a run down of how that went, some tips and tricks I've learned along the way, and my happiness so far (spoiler-- I love it). I've done my garage, 2 friend's garages, and my trailer (more on that to come), so I've got some experience with it now.
I started with this the day I moved in (a little over a year ago) and it took over 6 months to finish (mostly due to time and having too much crap in the basement). It's really nice now. Has held up super well, except where there was sitting water (which we've since identified and repaired). It's super easy to clean up oil (or cat puke) with just a wipe, it's a lot cozier than concrete (I actually don't wear shoes often enough in parts of the shop). It also looks great and brightened up the room.
Tools/Material required
crappy clothes/shoes
gloves
steel bristled scrub brush
paint roller and tray (high tack)
hose
5 gal bucket
paintbrush
roller extender
mask
painters tape
fan(if the area isn't well ventilated)
epoxy kit [I have used Rustoleum Epoxy Shield and Rock Solid]
Cost
$25 in consumables per time or so (gloves, masks, foam roller pads, paint rollers (I just buy the crappy plastic ones and toss 'em), and $120 for a 2 car garage kit. I've done between 200 and 600 sq ft on a single kit; really depends on how thirsty your concrete is. Total cost for my epoxy is 6 kits (with enough left over to do my 6x12 enclosed trailer's floor), probably just under $1,000 with consumables, and some inefficiencies from lessons learned. Paint costs are somewhere in $200 range but I'm only 2/3s done.
I've done this alone once and it sucked. 2 (or more) person job is much easier.
I prep the floor by washing it with the hose, and scrubbing anything away. I start with just water for the bad spots (hot if you have it nearby) and then I use the acid included in the kits. This is the worst part by far. Getting things clean here is the key to a good bond on the floor.
Once it's washed and free of oil/stains/etc. I rinse the hell out of it and let it dry. Great time for a fan if you're not in a well-ventilated space. Once it's dry, I stage everything out and tape off that I don't want epoxyed. I used to tape the wall, but now I just use a brush and slowly/carefully paint the edges of the floor. I definitely have a few little marks on my walls, but I'm no perfectionist (see build thread for examples of that).
Then, mix the 2 parts together. Sometimes the epoxy comes in cans (which you can add paint to to die them) and sometimes it's in pouches. The pouches can't be painted, and as such I went with a base color instead of a painted one (the blue/gray one, though the tan looks nice too). You have to stir it a bunch before it's ready to spread. Once time's passed you can paint and roll it on, while sprinkling paint chips all over the wet epoxy. It likes a wet edge, so try to keep the whole edge wet during your application. Throw out the brush, foam rolling pad, even the roller sometimes. All gets covered in crap.
If you do it in multiple stages, the edges where they meet are distinct and clear. I have gone over mine with a good amount of overlap to help pretty that up, but it's still noticeable if you're looking for it.
Hope all this helps someone. I'm happy to answer and questions about it.
Photo time! Here's before/during, after below.
https://live.staticflickr.com/7816/47510281232_f7d8acc99f_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2fojBnS)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048924166_90effb3f65_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJhyjj)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048924246_6833fdd4b8_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJhykG)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048422693_cd5af5bb93_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJeZfe)
I have a large garage/shop/basement (~1,500 sq ft of unfinished basement with HVAC and plumbing attached to ~780 sq ft of garage) under the house. I epoxyed the floor (in a few stages, as money, time,. storage allowed), I also painted the walls. Figured I would give a run down of how that went, some tips and tricks I've learned along the way, and my happiness so far (spoiler-- I love it). I've done my garage, 2 friend's garages, and my trailer (more on that to come), so I've got some experience with it now.
I started with this the day I moved in (a little over a year ago) and it took over 6 months to finish (mostly due to time and having too much crap in the basement). It's really nice now. Has held up super well, except where there was sitting water (which we've since identified and repaired). It's super easy to clean up oil (or cat puke) with just a wipe, it's a lot cozier than concrete (I actually don't wear shoes often enough in parts of the shop). It also looks great and brightened up the room.
Tools/Material required
crappy clothes/shoes
gloves
steel bristled scrub brush
paint roller and tray (high tack)
hose
5 gal bucket
paintbrush
roller extender
mask
painters tape
fan(if the area isn't well ventilated)
epoxy kit [I have used Rustoleum Epoxy Shield and Rock Solid]
Cost
$25 in consumables per time or so (gloves, masks, foam roller pads, paint rollers (I just buy the crappy plastic ones and toss 'em), and $120 for a 2 car garage kit. I've done between 200 and 600 sq ft on a single kit; really depends on how thirsty your concrete is. Total cost for my epoxy is 6 kits (with enough left over to do my 6x12 enclosed trailer's floor), probably just under $1,000 with consumables, and some inefficiencies from lessons learned. Paint costs are somewhere in $200 range but I'm only 2/3s done.
I've done this alone once and it sucked. 2 (or more) person job is much easier.
I prep the floor by washing it with the hose, and scrubbing anything away. I start with just water for the bad spots (hot if you have it nearby) and then I use the acid included in the kits. This is the worst part by far. Getting things clean here is the key to a good bond on the floor.
Once it's washed and free of oil/stains/etc. I rinse the hell out of it and let it dry. Great time for a fan if you're not in a well-ventilated space. Once it's dry, I stage everything out and tape off that I don't want epoxyed. I used to tape the wall, but now I just use a brush and slowly/carefully paint the edges of the floor. I definitely have a few little marks on my walls, but I'm no perfectionist (see build thread for examples of that).
Then, mix the 2 parts together. Sometimes the epoxy comes in cans (which you can add paint to to die them) and sometimes it's in pouches. The pouches can't be painted, and as such I went with a base color instead of a painted one (the blue/gray one, though the tan looks nice too). You have to stir it a bunch before it's ready to spread. Once time's passed you can paint and roll it on, while sprinkling paint chips all over the wet epoxy. It likes a wet edge, so try to keep the whole edge wet during your application. Throw out the brush, foam rolling pad, even the roller sometimes. All gets covered in crap.
If you do it in multiple stages, the edges where they meet are distinct and clear. I have gone over mine with a good amount of overlap to help pretty that up, but it's still noticeable if you're looking for it.
Hope all this helps someone. I'm happy to answer and questions about it.
Photo time! Here's before/during, after below.
https://live.staticflickr.com/7816/47510281232_f7d8acc99f_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2fojBnS)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048924166_90effb3f65_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJhyjj)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048924246_6833fdd4b8_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJhykG)
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49048422693_cd5af5bb93_c.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2hJeZfe)