Epoxy Floor Care, Polyurea Floor Care
Austin/San Antonio: 512-535-2492
San Diego: 858-603-3573
Las Vegas: 702-340-7365
A freshly installed epoxy flooring system, or a freshly
installed polyurea system, requires a fair degree of care. Both systems
are superbly durable, but a small degree of care will ensure that such
systems last for decades.
Clean Up Spills Promptly
This is the cardinal rule of floor coating care. When engineers and
technicians test flooring systems, such as epoxy flooring systems, they
use a 24-hour immersion test. Testers typically immerse fully cured
coatings through a gauntlet of noxious solvents and fluids such as
brake fluid, gasoline, xylene, MEK, acids, and more. These 24-hour
tests reveal which chemicals cause harm to flooring systems. Such
testing may reveal "no effect," "slight softening of film," or "film
destroyed."
That said, while epoxies, polyurethanes, and polyureas are tough as
nails, there aren't many coatings on earth that can survive 24 hours in
a bath of brake fluid or MEK. The harshest chemicals that floor
coatings will face are MEK, brake fluid, and xylene. On the other hand,
nearly every epoxy, advanced two-part commercial polyurethane, and
polyurea can easily shrug off all acids, mineral spirits, oils, and
gasoline. The surest way to ensure the viability and integrity of your
floor system is to clean up spills promptly. When spills are not
allowed to linger, even the toughest solvent will never get a chance to
blemish your flooring system.
Avoid Scratches and Abrasions
All floor coating systems are subject to abrasions through contact with
hard materials. Typically, car tires won't scratch your floor, because
car tires are soft. Hard tools, and dirty boots, however, can dull your
floor's surface by creating tiny scratches over time. Never drag
anything like boxes or cabinets across the floor--carry them or use a
hand truck instead.
Refinishing Your Epoxy or Polyurea
Floor Coating
Garage coatings can be refinished if necessary--at a cost
far less than the original installation. Of course, refinishing should
never be necessary within the first 7 to 10 years of your flooring
installation. The refinishing process is very simple: A flooring
installer can lightly abrade the surface with a walk-behind sanding
machine or manually with a sanding block on a stick with medium or
medium fine sandpaper. Sanding should abrade the surface just enough so
that subsequent coatings will adhere properly, but such sanding should
not reach through multiple layers of existing coatings. Naturally, any
spills must be cleaned thoroughly. After the light sanding, installers
remove all dust and debris. Thereafter, installers apply a new top coat
of clear coating (epoxy, polyurethane, or polyurea, depending on your
original installation). A refinish coat in nearly all cases will be a
single coat. Remember, the refinish coat is intended simply to revive
the floor's luster, and one coat usually does the trick.
