Friday, December 4, 2009
A Garage Floor Covering For Broken Concrete Floors
Maybe you're buying a home to remodel, and the garage flooring isn't in the best of shape. Or maybe you didn't realize that a concrete garage floor could crack and come apart until it was too late, and now there's really no way to apply paint or any other type of coating. It could even be that your garage flooded or the ground shifted, damaging the concrete in a way that could be neither foreseen or prevented. Regardless, there are many times where a garage floor covering is either desired or necessary due to a damaged floor.
Labels:
concrete garage floor,
garage floor,
garage flooring
Can't I Just Fix The Concrete?
Even though there are ways you can repair damaged concrete and paint over the cracks to make it not so noticeable, these methods always run the risk of returning cracks. In most cases, whatever caused the damage to the concrete in the beginning has a good chance of causing the problem again. As a result, the best objective is to forget about garage floor paint and purchase a garage floor covering in place of the repairs. Garage floor coverings are construed as garage floor tiles or mats. Most anything that does not coat the surface of your original concrete and adds another layer. You can use both of these garage floor coverings, but the first may not work in all situations.
Garage Floor Tiles Don't Always Work
When using tiles on concrete with small cracks, you do not need to fill the cracks prior to installation. The reason for this is a result of the tiles' ability to grip onto what they are secured to, therefore it does not matter whether or not there is a space upon which there not something to grip. As a matter of fact, because a garage floor tile isn't really coating and actually reside in being physically independent, it is possible these tiles may be cooperative in preventing more cracks and the expansion of small cracks. As with all garage floor coverings, the conception is when the tiles a laid in place, the damage and any blemishes will be covered up and no longer visible. However, tiles are not never to be used when the concrete garage floor has been stained. If this happens, as time passes, those stains will expand and "sweat", meaning that whatever sticky material that is underneath the tile will be immersed with the substance or chemical. The result of this is the tiles losing the grip they are designed to use, and your floor will not be in any greater format than before.
Garage Floor Mats Work All The Time
In some cases when the garage flooring is just really defiled, your only choice is to use garage floor mats. Fortunately, a mat is just as adept for resistance against chemicals as most anything, and it can be made to look great while doing it's job. Unluckily though, it is like placing a "Band-Aid" onto your problem, and may even return to reek havoc. If your concrete is seriously breaking up in spots, it might dish out some jagged edges that will tear any garage floor covering, particularly when the covering has been driven upon. It is possible that the terrible state of the concrete can go unnoticed as it degrades even further, if covered up by a garage floor mat. However, if your garage floor mat does get damaged, it can be replaced with the smallest of problems. Of course, that is only if you are able to afford to buy another mat.
You May Not Have A Choice Of Garage Floor Covering
When you think about it, the decision of what to use to for your damaged concrete is uncomplicated: using either mats or tiles is possible is tiles can stick. But if they don't for any reason, you are left with garage floor mats.
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