Most epoxy floors look great the first 5/10 years or so depending on the use. Mine is now 15 years old and it's starting to show it's age. I've heard the only way to fix it is to grind the surface back to concrete and put your new material on. OR go with a tile over the current floor. Has anyone been down this road? What are my alternatives?
I used carpeting from Home Depot / Lowe's big carpeting rolls, cut to length. It is a thin blue fabric with rubberized backing that acts as a moisture barrier, and gives a quiet surface to walk on.
8/7/23 4:51 p.m.
Most epoxy floors look great the first 5/10 years or so depending on the use. Mine is now 15 years old and it's starting to show it's age. I've heard the only way to fix it is to grind the surface back to concrete and put your new material on. OR go with a tile over the current floor. Has anyone been down this road? What are my alternatives?
12/28/23 12:41 p.m.
I used carpeting from Home Depot / Lowe's big carpeting rolls, cut to length. It is a thin blue fabric with rubberized backing that acts as a moisture barrier, and gives a quiet surface to walk on.
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