11-24-07, 05:04
|
#1 (permalink)
| | Registered User
Garrison is offline
Join Date: Sep 2007 Posts: 6 | Garage Flooring Options Looking to do something with the garage floor. It has a lot of chips and knicks in it, so epoxy is not an option without a lot of patching.
I've considered plastic options like RaceDeck, but have concerns with the noise and how it would handle the snow in the winter.
Came across Vault flooring tiles, but @ $4.00/sq ft it's a bit more than I had budgeted for. However, it got me wondering if anyone has put in a porcelain ceramic tile similar to what you'd put in your bathroom? These can be found for about a third of the cost of Vault and half the cost of RaceDeck.
Last edited by Garrison : 11-24-07 at 08:50.
| |
| |
11-24-07, 06:36
|
#2 (permalink)
| | Registered User
Deanski is offline
Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Norwalk, CT Posts: 1,977 | Re: Garage Flooring Options I've seen several garages with what looks like ceramic type tiles in use on the floor.
Looks nice. A Porsche dealership has some tiles as well, see here: Prestige Porsche and Ultimate Garage
Deanski
__________________ DR SHINE
Member: PCWA
______________________________
'06 997 Carrera S PCCB, PSE Chrono, 
Pending FarnbacherLoles Modifications
| |
| |
11-24-07, 07:29
|
#3 (permalink)
| | Registered User
Garrison is offline
Join Date: Sep 2007 Posts: 6 | Re: Garage Flooring Options Those are very likely to be the Vault ceramic tiles. They are very nice, no doubt.
The question I'm hoping to answer is if another tile would work as well, at a bit lower price. | |
| |
11-25-07, 09:58
|
#4 (permalink)
| | Never Seems Clean Enough
Saintlysins is offline
Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Northern Jersey Posts: 203 | Re: Garage Flooring Options I have a 2 car garage, the former owner was a plumber and did a lot of pre-cut pipe for jobs in this garage. Needless to say the floor was both chipped, cracked, and oil soaked. I spent a LOT OF MONEY to get the oil & chips out. Even went as far as to rent a concrete grinder to prep for an epoxy finish. After all that work, seems the oil had permeated the concrete, and there's not an epoxy company that would guarantee I wouldn't have problems with summertime, hot, sticky, performance tires pulling up the epoxy from lack of bond. Considered the plastic tiles, but after seeing (and hearing) them in other peoples homes, then reading about how some people are finding mold from trapped moisture under them, I banished that idea.
In my quest for alternative flooring I discovered some tile mastic that would bond to the now rough surface. Finding a tile warehouse, I offered to take any 500 sq. feet of porcelain tile they couldn't get rid of. Surprisingly, they had TONS of the stuff. I picked up 16 inch square tiles VERY cheap, and contracted with a local guy to put it in. He even cut pieces for a 6 inch base around the walls so hose down cleaning is a snap.
Unless you're going for a Dealer Showroom Floor look, just get a good strong tile in a neutral color. Stay away from 'clay' tiles, and 'thin' ceramic tiles. Porcelain tiles are very strong and have not let me down. Ask the installer to install them as tightly as possible and use the 'largest cut trowel' when applying the mastic as that's the base for the load on the tile and will prevent cracking under heavy loads. After the grouts cured, get a good grout sealer and apply liberally several times a year. This will keep the grout from staining.
OH ... you'll have to test for moisture coming through the concrete. Securely Duct Tape all sided of a 5 X 5 piece of plastic to the concrete floor, one edge against an outside wall. Leave there for one week. If you pull it up and there’s moisture on the plastic you can’t epoxy or tile the floor as the moisture will shortly erode any bonding. I’m luck I’m at the top of a hill & have good drainage.
Hope you do too. Good luck.
__________________ SaintlySins 06 - Ridgeline RTL 07 - E-350 - full AMG pkg 08 - 997 Turbo Cab (6 Speed, PCCB's & Heavily Optioned) | |
| |
12-08-07, 03:04
|
#6 (permalink)
| | AKA Bajapat
holland_patrick is offline
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: hartford ct Posts: 1,380 | Re: Garage Flooring Options I realy like the floor my ex wife now has...
it was .87 a sqft
and i got it from Home depot. http://autopia.org/forum/garage/49063-lots-work.html
__________________ | |
| |
12-08-07, 03:08
|
#7 (permalink)
| | AKA Bajapat
holland_patrick is offline
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: hartford ct Posts: 1,380 | Re: Garage Flooring Options
__________________ | |
| |
12-08-07, 03:24
|
#8 (permalink)
| | Registered User
sneek is offline
Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Calgary Alberta, Canada! Posts: 791 | Re: Garage Flooring Options I wish I had a 917 in my garage!!
Patrick: How are those holding up? | |
| |
12-08-07, 05:00
|
#9 (permalink)
| | AKA Bajapat
holland_patrick is offline
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: hartford ct Posts: 1,380 | Re: Garage Flooring Options Very well.......
going on three years now..
and i only need to vac once or two twice a year until i moved out
__________________ | |
| |
12-08-07, 06:23
|
#10 (permalink)
| | Registered User
BlueZero is offline
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Green Bay, WI Posts: 797 | Re: Garage Flooring Options Check out this forum... The Garage Journal Board - Powered by vBulletin
There's more garage flooring information than you'll know what to do with.
__________________
Scott
2003 Black Jeep Liberty
| |
| |
12-12-07, 08:01
|
#11 (permalink)
| | Registered User
Garrison is offline
Join Date: Sep 2007 Posts: 6 | Re: Garage Flooring Options 'Thanks for all the good advise. Saintlysins, I had not thought about approaching a warehouse for leftover lots so I appreciate that input. My biggest concern with the moisture test is when the frost comes out of the ground in the spring. My garage floor gets damp for a few days. I don't know if it is coming up through the floor from below, or it it is moisture that may have settled in right before it freezes in the fall, which won't be there if I have it covered by tile in the summer.
Last edited by Garrison : 12-12-07 at 04:50.
| |
| |
12-15-07, 08:38
|
#12 (permalink)
| | Never Seems Clean Enough
Saintlysins is offline
Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Northern Jersey Posts: 203 | Re: Garage Flooring Options You’re welcome Garrison. I may have read your concern wrong, so I’ll address it this way: “when the frost comes out of the ground in the spring, my garage floor gets damp for a few days. I don't know if it is coming up through the floor from below, or it it is moisture that may have settled in right before it freezes in the fall”
Water does not ‘settle in’ or maintain a presence waiting for thaw. Unless there’s moisture getting on the “surface” of the floor from above somehow (water flows in from the outside) … then it’s migrating up from below … which is thee reason to NOT put down tiles with mastic.
If you’ve got moisture issues (not to rain on your garage dreams here, but it sounds like you do), you’re better off putting down an Indoor/Outdoor tile. Winter freeze/thaw and any other moisture issues will pop any tiles put down with mastic and grout. Without getting into French Drains & Sump Pumps for cure of your garage slab and water table issues, it seems the best solution for your situation would be going with the plastic tiles. The one’s “CheapShot” put in his post would NOT be a good solution for you as they will trap moisture vapor underneath in their ‘grid’ supports, which will support mold & mildew. There are tiles that are ‘webbed’ or ‘breathable grid’ style and far more suitable to your situation as posted by “Holland Patrick”.
I am quite confident in my answers as my former career was in commercial flooring and I only want to be helpful, I say all this with one GIGANTIC DISCLAIMER … my answers are solely based by my interpretation to your post regarding moisture and I don't want anyone to spend good money without doing the proper prep and test first. (Do I sound like the side-labels of our detailing products or what?)
__________________ SaintlySins 06 - Ridgeline RTL 07 - E-350 - full AMG pkg 08 - 997 Turbo Cab (6 Speed, PCCB's & Heavily Optioned) | |
| | |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | | | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Rate This Thread | Linear Mode | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is On | | | | All times are GMT -7. The time now is 02:43. | | | |