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Old 12-09-2010, 01:09 PM   #57
Tiberious
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Has anyone had luck with the Costco black & white garage floor tiles? A buddy of mine is redoing his sister's garage for her inbound Audi R8.

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Old 12-09-2010, 01:23 PM   #58
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I went with an industrial epoxy. As mentioned, the prep work is the key.

My garage floor was in bad shape. Here are some before and after pictures.

The first photo is how the floor looked.
The second photo is after the entire floor was ground with a floor grinder.
The third and fourth photos are after epoxy.

Total cost was $1400 installed by a local epoxy contractor. Still looks like the day it was done after two years.
At my previous house I used the Rust-oleum stuff from Home Depot and it started flaking after the first winter.
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Old 12-09-2010, 02:18 PM   #59
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Originally Posted by Tiberious View Post
Has anyone had luck with the Costco black & white garage floor tiles? A buddy of mine is redoing his sister's garage for her inbound Audi R8.

Tib
Sounds the same as the lower grade RaceDeck called GarageTrac.

$1.87 sq. ft. right now good price!

here is a review I found. I would guess these are Costco cheap, cheap.

Not that impressive.
"The picture led me to believe that there is a circular pattern on the top of these, there is actually a diamond pattern crosshatch. This is not a big problem except that the diamonds are cut in half on the edges leaving half white half black diamonds between each tile if you do a checkerboard pattern as displayed in the picture. The tiles are not solid and you can see a pattern of the 'skeletal' system of the tiles as a slight indentation on their surface. There is about a millimeter gap between all the tiles. Overall they appeared very cheap. I was looking for something more professional so I returned them."



http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...rodid=11038308
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Old 12-09-2010, 03:10 PM   #60
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Thanks! They are certainly quite a bit cheaper. The garage he's working on is a single-car garage with no room for floor jacks, rolling tool carts, etc. It'd be primarily for appearance, for which I think they'd suffice.

Appreciate the response and insight!

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Old 12-09-2010, 03:23 PM   #61
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Just Finished mine......Looks great...
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Old 12-09-2010, 06:01 PM   #62
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Originally Posted by ITGuy11 View Post
I went with an industrial epoxy. As mentioned, the prep work is the key.

My garage floor was in bad shape. Here are some before and after pictures.

The first photo is how the floor looked.
The second photo is after the entire floor was ground with a floor grinder.
The third and fourth photos are after epoxy.

Total cost was $1400 installed by a local epoxy contractor. Still looks like the day it was done after two years.
At my previous house I used the Rust-oleum stuff from Home Depot and it started flaking after the first winter.
very nice i love it...........
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Old 12-09-2010, 09:57 PM   #63
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I talked with Sherwin Williams about the 2 part epoxy. It is intended for pristine, newly poured and cured concrete. Older floors with stains and oil, all bets are off. If you degrease and etch the p*ss outta it you got a chance of the stuff adhering, some people here have had luck. It is not recommended for old floors with stains and oil spots.
Thats what I have used on our 40 year old floors with no problem at all.
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Old 12-09-2010, 10:05 PM   #64
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Here is mine its been on for 3 years and love it. Ya spill something, anything and it wipes up with a dry rag. Want it to shine, just take a wet mop and bang it shines.
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Old 12-10-2010, 03:25 PM   #65
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Originally Posted by camaro52010 View Post
Look at these: http://www.rubberflooringinc.com/gar...ond-plate.html Description - The diamond plate design is one of the best floor tile patterns available and our most popular pattern for use as a garage flooring. It not only has tough appearance for use in heavy duty commercial / industrial / work shop settings, it also provides for a non slip surface in case the flooring is spilled on and/or gets wet by water, oil, or other liquids. Cutting of these tiles to custom fit them to your room can be easily done with a fresh utility knife and straight edge like a yard stick or ruler. Material – Constructed entirely of a proprietary and durable blend of flexible PVC. This blend ensures that the tiles are flexible and have the anti fatigue qualities similar to rubber flooring but also the durability, long life, and chemical resistance associated with polyvinyl chloride.
Made in USA? I don't see that on the link you posted.
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Old 12-10-2010, 05:37 PM   #66
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American company in Arizona with mfg. plants in Arizona and California.
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Old 12-10-2010, 08:21 PM   #67
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I have been wanting to do something in my garage but it's going to be expensive as I have a 5 car garage. If I go with racedeck, does water get trapped underneath? I like to wash my car in the garage so I am concerned about that. I wanted to do the epoxy when it was brand new but after the expensive of the house, decided not to. Now my sons truck leaked oil pretty bad in one bay. I may just do where I park the Camaro.
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Old 12-10-2010, 09:23 PM   #68
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Great thread! I've been trying to decide what tiles to get for a couple of years.

Race Deck = Made In the USA I'll be getting this product

This is a great thread. Gives me something to ponder over the winter!
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Old 12-10-2010, 10:21 PM   #69
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I was told that static electricity becomes an issue with modular tiles... has anyone run into that as an issue? That and creaking or plastic type sounds when you walk over them. Does anyone with racedeck or other modular floors experience this?
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Old 12-11-2010, 07:31 AM   #70
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Originally Posted by ITGuy11 View Post
I went with an industrial epoxy. As mentioned, the prep work is the key.

My garage floor was in bad shape. Here are some before and after pictures.

The first photo is how the floor looked.
The second photo is after the entire floor was ground with a floor grinder.
The third and fourth photos are after epoxy.

Total cost was $1400 installed by a local epoxy contractor. Still looks like the day it was done after two years.
At my previous house I used the Rust-oleum stuff from Home Depot and it started flaking after the first winter.
Looks good. A good contractor and the floor grinder seems to be the trick on old garages and epoxy.

Do you know the name of the epoxy they used?
How long was the garage down? Week?

Also can anyone comment on heat and epoxy...down here the tires get really hot in 100 deg weather and driving such onto an epoxy floor??

Last edited by Stex; 12-11-2010 at 07:48 AM.
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