In the planning phase for a new wash and wondering whether to use epoxy paint, or other coating, on the floor. What have you used and how durable is it? Also does it get slippery? How difficult is it to clean?
Not sure if you are talking ss or tunnel. Definitely nothing for ss, but I have seen tunnels with coatings on the walkways of each side - outside of the equipment footprint. The ones I am thinking of looked like it had some sand mixed in for traction for employees.In the planning phase for a new wash and wondering whether to use epoxy paint, or other coating, on the floor. What have you used and how durable is it? Also does it get slippery? How difficult is it to clean?
Well here’s some contrary advice. Go to any car dealer and look at the floor, even in shop. They are very clean. I think they look great and make the room pop.
What type of wash are you planning? I know you posted in the self-serve section but just confirming. Additionally, are you looking at the bay floors, equipment room, or where?In the planning phase for a new wash and wondering whether to use epoxy paint, or other coating, on the floor. What have you used and how durable is it? Also does it get slippery? How difficult is it to clean?
Not only could the water cause slickness, but a bigger concern would be the soaps and waxes.I had epoxy paint on the floor of my old shop and even the slightest bit of water would turn it into an ice skating rink.
$16/sf...i did floors at $6/sf. Only time i ever charged somebody that ridiculous price was if i didn't want to do the job cause i knew failure was eminent.I just started researching Polyurethane flooring for my 5-bay SS bay floors. I have a 40-year wash, and the bay floors are aggregate concrete. I'm seeing more rocks popping out, and cracks are getting deeper. I was hoping this option would help preserve the concrete. Another CW owner had a contractor apply an Epoxy coating 2 years ago at his 4-bay SS car wash and HIGHLY RECOMMENDED it!! I drove to see it myself, and looks very nice. The contractor added silica sand to give it more texture. The flooring was not slick at all, you could FEEL the sand grains. The only issue I saw was that a couple bays had black rubber tire burn marks. The epoxy didn't lift up, you just saw the black tread marks on the light gray flooring. I called his contractor a couple weeks ago for a quote but haven't heard back. I did some research and found that Polyurethane is a better option than Epoxy. More flexible and more durable with cold/heat, UV protection and moving tires. I just received a quote from California Custom Coating and SHOCKED AT THE PRICE!! At first, I thought the price was for the entire job, but it was $7680 FOR 1 BAY (480 square feet)!! That would be OVER $38,000 to do all 5 wash bays!! They apply a 1/4" thick Polyurethane base coat, color coat and 1/4" thick Polyaspartic top coat. They offer a 2 year warranty, in case the coating lifts. They said they "don't think you'll need to re-coat the bays for probably 8-10 years or so the polyaspartic holds up very well and does not break down quickly at all." His company has not done any other SS washes, just a couple gas station tunnels. He said that in a few years, I could have the top coat replaced for $2000 - $3000 / per bay. While I want to preserve my concrete, I'm not sure this is the best option. The ROI is not there! The last thing I need is a maintenance nightmare. Next week I'm meeting with 2 other coating companies. Attached is a photo of the car wash with the epoxy flooring...