Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Sponsors
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 8,196 Authors
71,939 Quality Articles
& 3,824 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Edward Rhymes (9,204)
Julian Price (12,254)
Dianne Lehmann (5,838)
Fran Larson (20,012)
Gregory Lewis (1,456)
Ira Coffin (13,580)
Joel Hendon (18,567)
Sandra E. Graham (9,984)
Shari Vaudo (1,123)
Steve Kovacs (4,352)
Linda DeWitt (2,026)
Brianna Popsickle (2,389)
Teresa Ortiz (11,014)
Stephany Springer (41,216)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
Dont Be Moved to Tears: Organize and Minimize the Stresses of Moving.

Storage Solutions for Small Spaces

Handling the Laundry in a Family With Children

8 Ways to Save Time to Revitalize You

6 Trusted Tips To Get Your Car Ready For Winter Driving

Get Rid Of Clutter Fast and Easy With These Simple Tips

Fall Clutter Control in Your Closet

Two Tips To Help You Indulge Yourself While Organizing Clutter

Organize Your Car: Action Step for Parents of Children with Special Needs

Crop Circles Inspire Organizing Clutter

Home » Categories » Home Life » Home Organization » Garage Floor Paint Does Not Have to Peel » Printer Friendly

Garage Floor Paint Does Not Have to Peel

Rated 3 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Harvey Chichester
Submitted Monday, March 06, 2006
Harvey Chichester (2,264)
Durall Industrial Flooring
Log in to become a member of Harvey Chichester's Fan Club!


Lifting and peeling paint is too often the end product of a homeowner’s efforts to dress up their garage with floor paint. The problem is worse than having no finish at all. Dirty, dusty, and stained concrete is usually accepted as the standard for home garages, but the eyesore of blisters, pealing, and chipping of a garage floor gone wrong is testimonial to the homeowner's failure. Fortunately, new technology in flooring, when combined with systems for preparing concrete properly, can now avoid disasters that leave garages looking worse than before the treatment.

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 re-dissolving into their carriers, under stress they can be susceptible to blistering, pealing, 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.

Modern architects often use the flexibility of epoxy flooring to allow spaces to flow together creating expanses of unbroken line. Now the living room and deck patio can appear as a single integrated living space. Exterior gardens and interior upholstery tie together with access walkways provided by colored epoxy flooring. As a result, snow, rain, leaves, and other outdoor changes provide unique variety to the outdoor spaces that can also be enjoyed from the indoor space.

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.

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 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)


Harvey Chichester is a well published principal of Durall Marine Products, a company with more than 40 years experience in developing special flow-coatings for industrial and consumers. Products developed are for Sailboats, Power Boats, and Ships. See http://www.boat-bottom-paint.com for online information about Durall and its products. Family history includes Sir Francis Chichester single handing around the globe. Admiral Edward Chichester, Superintendent of the British Navy. Rosalie Amelia Chichester, a female yachtsmen flourishing in the Victorian Age. John Chichester, made a fortune in the privateer business and captured a ship with 1200 lb. of gold off the coast of Ghana. Admiral John Chichester helped to defeat the Spanish Armada in 1588 aboard the HMS Larkey.



tweet this!



Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Harvey Chichester's Fan Club!

No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

This Article has been viewed 1,656 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on 3/6/2006 3:18:56 PM.
View other articles written by Harvey Chichester (2,264)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
How To Successfully Use the Color Orange In Your Interior Decorating

How to Clean Wood Furniture

Which Bathroom Vanity Is For You?

How to Make a 'Coupon Organizer' that Really Works

Choosing and Preparing a Site For Your New Storage Shed.

Is your mattress too hard or soft causing aches and pains? A memory foam mattress pad may be able to help with that.

Interior Painting Ideas Guaranteed to Bring Your Walls Back to Life!

How to Redesign Your Bedroom on a Small Budget

Organizing Ideas for Apartment Dwellers Who Lack Space But Need More of it

Ways to Keep the House Looking Tidy

Viewed from Cache. Load Time: 0.016.

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company