I have some recommendations if I may be so bold. Tramex moisture meter before your grind and after. We use Penntek products and our moisture readings must be below 5.5% before applying product. Expensive but save one redo it’s paid for. Grind the outside edge first. Hand grinding is the least consistent grind and doing it first then the big grinder over that as close to the wall as possible gives a smoother surface. Get a weed torch at Home Depot. We hook it up to our propane tanks from the propane grinder when we have moisture to high or in outer cracks. The mender will fail and lift up sometimes if it too wet in the cracks. Won’t get good adhesion. Sorry so much but we have been doing this a while and these things make a difference. Hope it helps
Oh and acetone will help evaporate water so we also pour it over cracks that or too wet or when something is too close to use a torch. It’s actually our first go to then the torch. We run into moisture a lot here in Louisiana
It's a night an day difference lol, glad you enjoyed, you can also run your grinder up against the walls first so that you will only have like less than an inch to grind on the edges as well, I'll be making an advanced video here soon enough too
Hello, My question to you is can I start up my business with just my 2 angle grinders (one 7” and 4”)? I know that its a lot of intense labor but it’s what I have to get started. I also have a shop vac for cleaning up dust. Also what do you think is the best epoxy/floor covering to get for beginners
Great to see you doing the grind re-surfacing method...a little more work...but the only way to go. The acid etching prep being pushed by companies like Rustoleum is a scam. Since the 1980's virtually every suburban home built by contractors is sealed. Acid etching doesn't work on sealed concrete floors. No pores, no bond. They even say it on their bottles, but in small print and don't tell you that it's almost certain your garage is sealed. They are afraid if customers knew they needed to rent a diamond grinder, set up a dust system, and then do the actual grinding, they would be much less likely to buy their product. I see so many UA-cam DIY videos of acid wash etching....and they are doing it on a sealed concrete floor and don't even know it. Crazy.
I almost wonder if it is intentional so that they can keep having people buy more products over time or just that it's "easier" for the home owner than to have to do the work necessary lol, thank you for the comment and awesome to see another person taking the actual time to prep the floor right!
@@CoatingCohortYes, it’s intentional to sell more product. They know that most homeowners would be too intimidated to use a grinder on their floor and would never purchase their product.
Most people dont appreciate the importance of the termination point with epoxy. I was starting to think i was the only one trenching for cut offs under the door
It looks great, keeps the consistency of the concrete when the garage door is closed and also helps with any of the yellowing that can occur with epoxy over time, a win win win we believe lol
@@CoatingCohort I use poly eurea as a base usually and aspartic for top coat. Done probably 500 garages and about a dozen shops that were over 3000 Sq ft without a hint of ambering. Even did a bob cat dealership and that floor still looks new too! Incredible flooring systems, very under rated
Thank you for showing and old dirty oil stained floor. This is what you will usually see so staging a clean brand new slab for a prep video is misleading
@@CoatingCohort exactly! I've had multiple jobs that used a full 2 gallon Crack repair kit and I mix mine with sand for volume and abrasive purposes 🤣 Tbh I was hoping you were going to do the stub walls too. I developed my own install procedure for vertical surfaces and wanted to compare lol
I have some recommendations if I may be so bold. Tramex moisture meter before your grind and after. We use Penntek products and our moisture readings must be below 5.5% before applying product. Expensive but save one redo it’s paid for. Grind the outside edge first. Hand grinding is the least consistent grind and doing it first then the big grinder over that as close to the wall as possible gives a smoother surface. Get a weed torch at Home Depot. We hook it up to our propane tanks from the propane grinder when we have moisture to high or in outer cracks. The mender will fail and lift up sometimes if it too wet in the cracks. Won’t get good adhesion. Sorry so much but we have been doing this a while and these things make a difference. Hope it helps
Oh and acetone will help evaporate water so we also pour it over cracks that or too wet or when something is too close to use a torch. It’s actually our first go to then the torch. We run into moisture a lot here in Louisiana
We actually do this, I just didn't want to give that much free game away haha, but I'll have an advanced guide out here soon on that!
I was not aware of the acetone though, that is definitely a great tip, thank you for that!
Thank you for the video! Very informative. I have done 7 jobs so far and got a lot of tips from this. NEED to get myself a racatac.
It's a night an day difference lol, glad you enjoyed, you can also run your grinder up against the walls first so that you will only have like less than an inch to grind on the edges as well, I'll be making an advanced video here soon enough too
Omega Concrete Coatings here out of Kenner, La. Racatac’s are life savers.Worth every penny. Saves your body
Free Community where a 7 figure owner shares everything for his floor coating business: www.skool.com/freedlm
Hello,
My question to you is can I start up my business with just my 2 angle grinders (one 7” and 4”)? I know that its a lot of intense labor but it’s what I have to get started. I also have a shop vac for cleaning up dust. Also what do you think is the best epoxy/floor covering to get for beginners
Yes you can, I use Resinwerks for all my products as I have known the owners and they have been great people to me, hope this helps!
What a beautiful job
Thank you!
Amazing need more
TOO TRUE
Great to see you doing the grind re-surfacing method...a little more work...but the only way to go. The acid etching prep being pushed by companies like Rustoleum is a scam. Since the 1980's virtually every suburban home built by contractors is sealed. Acid etching doesn't work on sealed concrete floors. No pores, no bond. They even say it on their bottles, but in small print and don't tell you that it's almost certain your garage is sealed. They are afraid if customers knew they needed to rent a diamond grinder, set up a dust system, and then do the actual grinding, they would be much less likely to buy their product. I see so many UA-cam DIY videos of acid wash etching....and they are doing it on a sealed concrete floor and don't even know it. Crazy.
I almost wonder if it is intentional so that they can keep having people buy more products over time or just that it's "easier" for the home owner than to have to do the work necessary lol, thank you for the comment and awesome to see another person taking the actual time to prep the floor right!
@@CoatingCohortYes, it’s intentional to sell more product. They know that most homeowners would be too intimidated to use a grinder on their floor and would never purchase their product.
Great video
Glad you enjoyed it
What if exterior concrete patio has broom finish. Does this process remove broom finish?
yes it will, if you are able to grind enough
Most people dont appreciate the importance of the termination point with epoxy. I was starting to think i was the only one trenching for cut offs under the door
It looks great, keeps the consistency of the concrete when the garage door is closed and also helps with any of the yellowing that can occur with epoxy over time, a win win win we believe lol
@@CoatingCohort I use poly eurea as a base usually and aspartic for top coat. Done probably 500 garages and about a dozen shops that were over 3000 Sq ft without a hint of ambering. Even did a bob cat dealership and that floor still looks new too! Incredible flooring systems, very under rated
Can I repair the cracks and then grind the floor down ?
yessir and you should always!
@@CoatingCohort thank you !
Thank you for showing and old dirty oil stained floor. This is what you will usually see so staging a clean brand new slab for a prep video is misleading
Anytime, I believe showing the worst conditions first will help when those brand new construction slabs they will be cake
@@CoatingCohort exactly! I've had multiple jobs that used a full 2 gallon Crack repair kit and I mix mine with sand for volume and abrasive purposes 🤣
Tbh I was hoping you were going to do the stub walls too. I developed my own install procedure for vertical surfaces and wanted to compare lol