dunno what it costs, but the local home depot seems to have just had its
floors polished. they are now reflective. you can see where the machine
stopped at the end of each aisle, left circular swirl patterns like a floor
buffer; seems to have taken off ~1/8" of the slab, i.e. you can catch it on
your shoe if you toe it a bit. really nice finish, but gotta be like ice
when wet. prolly not cheap, either.
scott
At 10:44 AM 9/27/2004 -0400, Dan Harris wrote:
>I checked with my friend the floor finisher. He generally uses Tennant
>products.
>
>As I said in my previous post, my floors were done with clear products so
>came out looking like wet concrete. It looks great. On a different floor of
>mine he used an epoxy leveller to fill in some pock marks and take care of a
>slope. It was quite watery in texture so easily found its own level. The
>Tennant web site has a fairly comprehensive quote page that might be worth a
>try:
>
>http://www.tennantfloorcoatings.com/diy/quote.asp
>
>Dan Harris
>
>daharris@interlog.com
>
>
>
> > > The local Tech School where I recently took a welding course has floors
> > > coated with something clear. Anyone know what that might be? It
>doesn't
> > > look quite as fancy as a painted floor, but it provides the ease of
> > > cleaning and dust elimination like a painted floor. I have no idea what
> > > it is, though. Anyone know?
> >
> > I donno, maybe the same stuff they use on the floor at Sam's Clubs . .
>it's
> > clear and apparently bullet-proof . . How can we find out?
> >
> > I'm cursed with a shop floor that is pocked, patched & Bondoed under 4
> > coats of alkyd paint . . I'm NOT stripping it but I'm leaning toward a
> > "super-adherent" primer that my paint store is touting . . then top
>coating
> > with two-pack epoxy . .
> > Tony
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