Garage floor paint?
Author
Discussion

cayman-black

Original Poster:

13,152 posts

232 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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My concrete garage floor is really dusty so I was thinking to seal, paint it with something that might help. I want to do it the most economic way as its only for parking the car , nothing else in there. Can you recommend a product?
The concrete was finished at the end of January this year so by the summer it should be fine to do. Thx !

ade73

459 posts

125 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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Don't bother unless it's epoxy, it will pull up and get tatty really fast.

Rich Boy Spanner

1,696 posts

146 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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Make sure you get as much dust up as possible before painting it. It's surprising how much is there and it isn't easy to get it all. Takes time. I used a 'garage floor paint' from B&Q or somewhere and it has done fine over nearly 20 years. Some has come up but not much.

archie456

462 posts

238 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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I have used 2 part epoxy paint from Regal Paints in 2 garages now.

I didn't prepare very well at all compared to some of the suggested standards on here, but it has all stayed very firmly in place, and has sustained no scratching or chipping damage at all.

I picked the supplier on the basis that epoxy is epoxy, and they were cheap due to selling directly.

Panamax

6,602 posts

50 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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Even with epoxy it will peel off under your wheels unless you "seal" the surface with some sort of primer first.

Ask me how I know....

Dannbodge

2,290 posts

137 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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I used the cheapest garage floor paint I could find on eBay.

Had no issues with peeling under tyres or excessive wear and I literally swept the floor and painted it with a roller on a broom handle.


cayman-black

Original Poster:

13,152 posts

232 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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Thanks all , some different veiws here,,,laugh Epoxy seems to be the one.

OutInTheShed

11,734 posts

42 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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I think much depends on the concrete.
New stuff can have a lot of dust at the surface just waiting to leave.
Older stuff can have a lot of grains of gravel forming the surface.

My old garage, you could see the gravel in the surface. A quick coat of paint sealed the dust, but it did wear off the peaks fairly quickly.
Result was a washable floor which didn't absorb much water and didn't create dust.
Not pretty but it met my needs,

Proper job is probably either epoxy or maybe water based polyurethane sealer.

Simon_GH

781 posts

96 months

Wednesday 19th April 2023
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I used a concrete sealing product. Clear liquid, really quick and easy to apply with a roller on a long handle and seems to have stopped the dust. You can’t tell it’s there though so doesn’t improve the aesthetics.

cayman-black

Original Poster:

13,152 posts

232 months

Thursday 20th April 2023
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seeing that my concrete floor is new and clean perhaps I just need a sealer then and no need to paint as I would just like to reduce the dusty floor?

ChemicalChaos

10,651 posts

176 months

Thursday 20th April 2023
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Epoxy is the answer...

I used Safeguard Drybase ECS for my workshop floor - give a week to fully cure between coatings, and hoover - not brush - the floor before the first application.

johnnyBv8

2,474 posts

207 months

Thursday 20th April 2023
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I read quite a few poor reviews for Regal epoxy so went for Floorsaver epoxy.

Square Leg

15,427 posts

205 months

Friday 21st April 2023
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My then new concrete floor just had one really thin coat of Johnstones floor paint, and two full strength top coats.
Where my car stands I dropped a cheap carpet tile in the wet paint under each wheel.
That was 18 years ago and whilst it’s worn away only where I drive in and out, it hasn’t peeled anywhere.

It’s the silicone / rubber compounds in tyres that reacts with paint and lifts it, hence the carpet tiles.

cayman-black

Original Poster:

13,152 posts

232 months

Saturday 22nd April 2023
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So I have decided to seal the dusty concrete and have purchased 25 litres of Everbuild 403 concrete hardener on offer for £28.
As I think my floor is very porous I,m thinking to spread it over with a broom.

Simon_GH

781 posts

96 months

Saturday 22nd April 2023
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I used a roller with a long handle - took very little time

Catastrophic Poo

5,762 posts

202 months

Saturday 22nd April 2023
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archie456 said:
I have used 2 part epoxy paint from Regal Paints in 2 garages now.

I didn't prepare very well at all compared to some of the suggested standards on here, but it has all stayed very firmly in place, and has sustained no scratching or chipping damage at all.

I picked the supplier on the basis that epoxy is epoxy, and they were cheap due to selling directly.
I ended up with free paint from Regal as they mislabelled all the tins and cocked the order right up.

Floor seems good after a couple of years tho.

Condi

18,978 posts

187 months

Sunday 23rd April 2023
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https://www.screwfix.com/p/leyland-trade-heavy-dut...

This stuff did fine, the floor was swept then vacuumed to get all the dust up. Was a new concrete pad and took 2 coats, but seems robust enough for general garage use, better than having dust everywhere.

ShortBeardy

332 posts

160 months

Sunday 23rd April 2023
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I did mine with a thing called Rust Bullet, originally designed for cars etc. it is an epoxy that that requires humidity to harden but does not require a hardener. Getting the loose stuff off the floor first is a big deal. Also remove any oil (there are supplied degreasers). Most of the professional and wanna bees grind the floor first. I pressure washed ours first and I think its done pretty well over the last 5 years.
It went on with a roller but masks are a must. If you want to recoat there is a limited window of opportunity, or leave it a long time and then re scuff the surface. Floor is lethal (slippery when wet), unless some grit (glass beads), is used.
It's made lying under a car vastly better than prior and it keeps the dirt and dust to a minimum. It's lasted very well but pulled up in a couple of places where hot sticky tires have been stopped.

Stupak

1 posts

7 months

Thursday 2nd January
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ChemicalChaos said:
Epoxy is the answer...

I used Safeguard Drybase ECS for my workshop floor - give a week to fully cure between coatings, and hoover - not brush - the floor before the first application.
Would you mind answering the below as I’m finding it impossible to get reviews or opinions on the Drybase ECS Epoxy?
How has it been holding up?
did you use a primer? I know the packaging says it doesn’t need but I’m worried the finish won’t be as good?
Is the finish very shiny, or more of a sort of Matt / eggshell finish?

Really appreciate your feedback.