lostbottle.com lostbottle.com
Search:    Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Add Url >> Add Your Article   
 

How do Pregnancy Tests Work?

Ways to test for pregnancy and how they work - Maria Gonzalez
 

Choosing the Right Mower

A guide to different lawn mowers - Paul Burke
 

How to Choose or Grow the Perfect Tomato

Tips on growing tomatoes. - Gary Nave
 
 

The Impact Of Beds On Bedroom Design

In years past, beds were not considered to be an element that factored into bedroom design, more jus ... - Paul Jolley
 

Must Have Tools For Homebuilding

There are many tools that you must have handy when building a house but there are a few that get use ... - Mike Merisko
 

Budget Ideas for Your Kitchen

For those people who love to eat or cook, the kitchen is usually the best, and most used, room in th ... - Bill McRea
 

Final Goodbyes

Grief is a funny thing. It can hang around for a very long time, affecting various parts of our life ... - Fran Watson
 

Baby Cribs - Safety Is Key

You have just learned that you are expecting a baby. Even if you have other children, you must take ... - Martin Smith
 
 

  Home –› Garden & Home –› Home Construction & Renovation
   
 

Garage Flooring, Floor Coverings, Floor Material, Epoxy, Concrete Floor Paint, & Floor Coatings

   

Author: Harvey Chichester

Lifting and peeling paint from epoxy coverings, coatings and seals are too often the end product of efforts to dress up a garage, shop or basement. A lifting and peeling problem is worse than having no finish at all. The eyesore of blisters, peeling, and chipping of a floor gone wrong is testimonial to a failure in preparation. Fortunately, after 40 years of development technology in flooring, one should no longer rely on raw materials like muriatic acid (Hydrochloric) to clean and prep your floor. Applicators now realize that an acid etch using a simple raw muriatic acid is no cure all. Integrated systems for preparing concrete properly can now avoid disasters that leave garages looking worse than before they were coated.

Preparation is everything when applying finishes. You can only expect a surface to stay in place if its substrate is permanent. Obviously, if the substrate crumbles or moves, your surface will move with it. Today, after 40 years of application experience, flooring experts have developed application preparation procedures that help minimize the risk of substrates moving. New floors are especially vulnerable and require extensive preparation. New concrete is dusty for the first few years while the latents of concrete on the surface are kicked, walked, or driven off. Those latents must be removed before quality epoxy topcoats are applied or the topcoats will move with the latents as they break free from the substrate.

Blasting away part of your floor often leaves corn rows cut into the floor due to over lap, and will need to be filed. Blasting often just brings you down to a new level of contamination. It is often better to clean 100% of the surface using chemicals that are designed to work together in an integrated system to assure a clean, solid surface. When you wash your clothing your detergent uses a change in pH to help release soils. Water softeners and rinse agents are blended into laundry detergents, dish shops and even shampoos to assist the pH change in releasing soils and contaminants.

Cleaning first with a high pH or alkaline degreaser attacks oil and grease contaminants while moving the floor pH higher. Next slamming your dirty surface with a low pH acidic cleaner attacks minerals, rust and other particles, makes your pH jump 10 points or better to shock contaminants loose from substrates. The acidic cleaner should have detergents, rinse agents and water softeners blended into it so you know that it is formulated to do the best job possible. It is vitally important to bring your pH back to normal 6.5 or 7 pH after cleaning, with a scrub rinse. Have you ever run your finger across your car after pressure washing only to find it still has a thin layer of road film on it? Surface tension holds even high pressure from penetrating many films. You need to break the surface tension with contact during all three steps of cleaning. The more aggressive the contact the better for removing concrete latents, small particles of concrete that are ready to break of to become that endless dust coming off unquoted concrete floors.

Rotary scrubbers, similar to what a school custodian utilizes, can be fitted with stiff bristle brushes using carbide chips imbedded in flexible nylon bristles to scrub your floor. The bristles dive into mall pours, cracks, and holes to help strip away fragile cement particles that are softer than the exposed carbide chips. These scrubbers should be used for your alkaline cleaning, your acidic cleaning, and for your final rinse cleaning. Scrub rinsing stops the chemical action of your cleaners and provides a liquid medium to bring your floor pH back to neutral and flush contaminants and residual detergents away. Once dry (1 to 4 hours) you are ready for your coating, paint, epoxy or seal.

Epoxy flooring is weather-resistant, and unharmed by rain, snow, oil, and flooding. This resistance is due to the fact that epoxy coatings, unlike paints, come in two parts. When mixed, a catalyzing process changes these two parts from a liquid to a permanent solid. In contrast, paints are carried in water or solvent bases that evaporate to leave the finish. If you reintroduce one of those carriers to the surface, the paint often is able to re-dissolve back into a liquid state.

Even though painted garage finishes are formulated to resist dissolving into their carriers, under stress they can be susceptible to blistering, peeling, and chipping. But water and most solvents have no effect on sealed epoxy surfaces. Epoxy flooring goes on at the job site and requires no seams, creating a continuous membrane that seals what is above from what is below. These epoxy surfaces have been used in food processing plants for over 50 years now. Mold, mildew and other contaminants cannot penetrate the epoxy membrane, and wash off easily.

One should not rely on retail store clerks to help with a floor that will be used for 10 to 20 years. Factory-direct kits of materials including step-by-step instructions and a 24/7 help line are now available online. With these resources, anyone can put a quality floor down in their garage that will last for decades. Like a car finish, you may get some scratches and marks, but also like a car finish, a little touching up can keep those finishes looking great for decades.

Durall Industrial Flooring offers no-cost, no-obligation quotes for its fully customized kits of materials, including all preparation materials and procedures, for installing industrial quality epoxy or urethane coatings at www.concrete-floor-coatings.com. These beautifully sealed and easy-to-maintain floors come in over 20 colors. The floor finish can be gloss, flat, or satin and may be easily accented with decorative chips. Additionally, the floors may be skid-resistant like emery paper, yet still be easy to sweep or squeegee.

For photo examples and more detail, visit www.concrete-floor-coatings.com For more information, contact Harvey Chichester at harvey@durallfmg.com Phone: 800-466-8910 or 952-888-1488 (24/7)

Author Bio:
Harvey Chichester is a proclaimed scripter. Harvey likes to write articles about this topic.
You can also reach this article by using: lowes home improvement, home improvement loan, home improvement products, home improvement stores
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
A Guide to Wedgwood China
 
Medical Alert System For Senior
 
10 Pregnancy Risk Factors that Every Pregnant Woman Should be Aware of
 
Dealing With your Pets' Allergies
 
Enhance Beautiful Stamped Cards with Basic Paper Techniques
 
Basic Care of Budgerigars
 
The Added Advantage In African American Children's Education: Computer Homeschooling (Part 2)
 
Abatement and Consistency Philosophy
 
Training Your Dog To Sit And Stay
 
Breed Profile - "Westie" - West Highland White Terrier
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Medical Care

 

Fitness & Health

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Entertainment

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Self Help

 

Shopping Online

 

Law & Politics

 

Garden & Home

 

Food & Recipe

 

Indoor Games

 

Realty & Property

 

Employment & Careers

 

Banking & Finance

 

Creative Arts

 

Technology & Science

 

Academics & Education

 

News & Events

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Business & Commerce

 

Teens & Kids

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Networking

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 
Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.lostbottle.com - All Rights Reserved.