Melting Snow/Ice Containment

zzyyzx

New member
So this is my first winter outside of Southern Cal for a long time. I'm now in Indiana. I have a heated garage, but there's no floor drain. What I'm finding is happening now is when I pull into the garage, all the ice/snow/slush/etc. that freezes to the bottom of the car and the wheel wells melts and is creating large puddles. I stop before I pull in the garage and take a pry bar and knock off all the stuff I can, but there's always some I can't get. Plus, my wife won't get out and do the same for her car so her side is pretty bad.



Does anyone know of any way to contain this mess? I was looking online as some of the spill containment mats, but I think those will be really expensive due to their specialization. I also thought about somehow securing some 1x1s on the floor and caulking around them, but I can't think of a way to secure them that will be easily removable in the spring or that won't permanently damage the floor.



Any thoughts/suggestions from those who have been through a winter before? Thanks!!!
 
The year I put my car in my heated garage I would just pull it in and leave it. In the morning when I was leaving for work the floor would be wet. I would kick any large chunks of snow or ice that didn't melt yet out the door. When I came home that night it would be dry. :up Get a floor squeege. This will get rid of the water and allow it to dry faster.



James
 
Consider taking a tarp and rolling 2x4's on three sides of the tarp to give it structure and hold it in shape. Place this underneath the car beneath the wheels or even just beyond the wheels like a big diaper. (You can put a rubber outdoor mats where you step out of the car so you don't get your feet wet.) The fourth end of the tarp should fold outside the garage door so the melted water can run out the door. Adjust the door so it doesn't seal tight at that point so you don't create a dam.



I did this for quite a few seasons before I had a heated garage with a drain and it worked great. It kept my painted floor clean and the sludge/snow/dirt contained. And it was cheap and temporary. :up
 
Brad, I think that's the simple suggestion I was looking for... Thanks!!! I'm going to try to find that stuff and make it happen in the next few days. Thanks!!!
 
zzyyzx said:
Brad, I think that's the simple suggestion I was looking for... Thanks!!! I'm going to try to find that stuff and make it happen in the next few days. Thanks!!!



:xyxthumbs Maybe you could take a pic when you get it done. Good luck!
 
Very nice. There's Brookstone in the mall nearby. I'll go see if they have a sample there and if I can save shipping by getting it from there. Thanks for your help everyone!!!
 
Does anyone else but me think this would also let you wash your car in the garage by having the end nearest to the garage door open so the water flows out the door?!?!?
 
A very nice mat indeed! The mat looks as good as some kitchen floors.:D



It would matter -no pun intended- what the temp is for washing. Water out the door may ice up quickly in freezing temps. The side edge / molding height will play a factor as well. A QEW is a definite option.



Don't forget your vinyl protectant for the mat.:lol
 
Hmmm...That Brookstone mat is the best value I've seen.



>>>EDIT>>> Spoke too soon. It's the standard Park Smart Mat. A quick Google turned them up for less here...for one...



http://www.sparkleauto.com/park-smart-mats.html



but I still like the idea.<<<<<







Outstanding! I agree that with it in place one should be able to wash in the garage...at least as long as they're judicious about how much water they use.



My only issue there is my garage faces north so water running out from under the door will freeze into a large and dangerous puddle.



Has anybody here tried using a Shop Vac to take up the water from the floor?





Peter...exploring new ways..in Denver
 
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