Thank you for the video. I'm doing a simular for who I work for. This is great seeing how you do it, I contrast to how we did it. Looks awesome man!!!!
He doesn´t pay much attention to the edges . He , also, did them after he applied the primer at the center of the room. Very encouraging for the first time DIYselfers.
This is a Big world always going to be negative people responses even tho it looks good , I had a carpet on a front porch i pulled up , I was not going to grind down swirl marks or use adhesive remover for the adhesive, Instead I did not cover my area this thick of flakes but it worked great covered even a couple of cut marks in the floor by a circular saw covered it all up. You could not find the circular saw cuts in floor it work that good .
@@katiemcweeny8196 lol... Im a "non-union guy" and I can defiantly assure you we don't do our work like this. For one the video doesn't even show if the floor was prepped or not; When it comes to priming the floor and doing the edges around equipment or door frames we have guys hand brushing to ensure proper priming. After letting the first coat of primer cure, then do we prime again (same process) which is when we throw the flake. Let that cure, and after we scrape up all the loose flake and vacuum the floor.
Giovanny Abrego It’s an office.. more than likely had carpet and they grinded the floor to remove all the glue and adhesive. Besides vacuuming that’s all the prep needed for adhesion. I would’ve did one more clear coat but other than that it was done correctly.
Thank you for the video. I'm doing a simular for who I work for. This is great seeing how you do it, I contrast to how we did it. Looks awesome man!!!!
Do the paint chips create a non-slip result or just decorative?
What is the name of the seal used afterwards to upkeep the floors
He doesn´t pay much attention to the edges . He , also, did them after he applied the primer at the center of the room. Very encouraging for the first time DIYselfers.
Ioannis Lazaridis
The edges will be covered with new baseboards
What are those shoes you have on?
whistle3man
Spikes, so you don’t leave footprints
This is a Big world always going to be negative people responses even tho it looks good , I had a carpet on a front porch i pulled up , I was not going to grind down swirl marks or use adhesive remover for the adhesive, Instead I did not cover my area this thick of flakes but it worked great covered even a couple of cut marks in the floor by a circular saw covered it all up. You could not find the circular saw cuts in floor it work that good .
Did you use polyaspartic or epoxy for your base coat? As well did the pulling of the scraper not leave any sharp pointed spots?
Awesome job
+SHIVSHAKTI - thanks!!
Is the floor slick after this process?
no
Wow, I would be pretty upset if I paid for that kind of quality. Missed some steps. Every step is very important in this process
My exact thought. Should be call how not to install a epoxy flake floor.
You guys should state what he missed.looked good to me . company juat did parents garage exactly same process
Must be a non union guy
@@katiemcweeny8196 lol... Im a "non-union guy" and I can defiantly assure you we don't do our work like this.
For one the video doesn't even show if the floor was prepped or not; When it comes to priming the floor and doing the edges around equipment or door frames we have guys hand brushing to ensure proper priming. After letting the first coat of primer cure, then do we prime again (same process) which is when we throw the flake. Let that cure, and after we scrape up all the loose flake and vacuum the floor.
Giovanny Abrego
It’s an office.. more than likely had carpet and they grinded the floor to remove all the glue and adhesive. Besides vacuuming that’s all the prep needed for adhesion. I would’ve did one more clear coat but other than that it was done correctly.
This is okay for a DIYer but is far from professional.