Garage Floor Tiles | Page 2 | FerrariChat

Garage Floor Tiles

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by Scotty, Sep 24, 2004.

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  1. Artvonne

    Artvonne F1 Veteran

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    I watched the guy across the street spend three days pressure washing and acid etching his floor, with all of his stuff out in the driveway, just to put down epoxy paint. While many have good luck, it does eventually pop or peel and the repair is not always easy.

    I bought cheap CVT tiles at Home Depot, and some glue, washed the floor, spread the glue, and a little over an hour later, a awesome floor. $.058 per square foot and I was done. That was over a year ago. It still looks cool, and its so much cleaner and nicer than a nasty cement floor. Mop it, put down some polish, and man its just so pretty. I had 3 tiles pop up over the winter from the skid loader sitting there, cost all of, uhmmmm nothing. I had some extra. But otherwise about $3 repair.
     
  2. indaville

    indaville Formula 3

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    If you get marble of some other type of tile can you put a car lift on top of it? Or should you have the posts sit directly on the concrete?

    Matt
     
  3. smg2

    smg2 F1 World Champ Sponsor

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    i've spec'd lots of cemercial buildings with a self leveling epoxy. this stuff does not come back up or peel, bubble and what not that the consumer grade paints do. however it is very expensive and requires specialy trained personal to handle.

    it's used mostly in heavy industry and manufacturing of food handeling equipment where FDA requirements are. i've had good results with dex-o-tex.
    http://www.dexotex.com/index.php?href=productdetail&id=48

    so for the guys with no budget, this would be ideal.
     
  4. docapl

    docapl Formula Junior

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    Can you post some pictures of this ?

    Thanks
     
  5. Artvonne

    Artvonne F1 Veteran

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    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  6. spiderseeker

    spiderseeker Formula 3

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    Artvonne: Aren't the tiles very slick when wet ?
    (I'd be concerned with snow,rain etc)
     
  7. mgtr1990

    mgtr1990 Formula 3

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    Agree with this 100%
     
  8. alberto

    alberto Formula 3

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    Artvonne:

    I've been thinking of laying down the same tiles. However I am concerned about them staining, etc. Have your tiles stained from hot tires, oil, etc? Do the hot tires leave any marks (if not stains)? Also, when you jack up a car, does the jack scar the tiles or leave permanent depression marks?

    You probably have the acid test of tiles, black and white. If they do not stain or mark, then no other color is likely to be a problem would be my guess.

    Thank you.

    Alberto
     
  9. TopElement

    TopElement Formula 3

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    Very nice. I remember seeing your site a long time ago with pics following the whole garage construction. Came out great.
     
  10. Artvonne

    Artvonne F1 Veteran

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    Yes, they stain and scratch. So what? I can buff the floor and polish it and if that wont do it, replace a few $.60 cent tiles. The floor cost me a little over $400, and I don't think anyone can beat the look and durability for the price. Racedeck, or simular tiles are 10 times the cost. But remember as well that those tiles are open and anything spilled leaks through. The rubber tiles are just as expensive, but probably just as susceptible to maring and staining. I like it a lot, and will probably do the same thing at the next house.
     
  11. 2COOOL

    2COOOL Karting

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    Has anyone used the U Kote it floor paint? Highly praised on My Classic Cars.
     
  12. Harmonyautosport

    Harmonyautosport Formula Junior

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    You can kind of see it in this pic. We have porcelain tiles as the flooring in the work shop and fabrication department. After a lot of research we found this to be the best material. In a commercial shop we have yet to have any cracking or problems, very easy clean up.
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
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  13. Testacojones

    Testacojones F1 Veteran

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    Marble stains easily, it sucks in liquids. Also wet marble as slippery as ice.
     
  14. italia16

    italia16 Formula Junior Silver Subscribed

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    Home Depot has some vinyl tile that is shinny, easy to clean and only cost me $160 to do this:
     
  15. wetpet

    wetpet F1 World Champ BANNED

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    awesome
     
  16. spike308

    spike308 F1 Rookie Owner Silver Subscribed

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  17. Modenafan

    Modenafan F1 World Champ Lifetime Rossa Owner

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  18. driver

    driver Karting

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    I opted for an Epoxy 3 layer floor in my 2 car garage. I investigated the tiles and found that stuff does get in between them, and they do not keep a clean look. The epoxy is impervious to anything you would have in the garage and oil wipes up with a paper towel. And no concrete dust...ever. The total cost for about 420 square feet, plus the side lips was $1625.
     
  19. wetpet

    wetpet F1 World Champ BANNED

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    is this diy or does it include install?
     
  20. driver

    driver Karting

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    You can't DIY. That price was installed. The first process is to grind off a slight amount of the concrete so that you are starting from a clean base. No acid etching. Then a sealer (color of your choice) is put down. While it is wet "chips", which give a marbled appearance, are sprinkled on. Next day, excess is vacuumed of, and a thick clear coat is applied. Keep your car off for a week, and then you are all set. Both my Alfa race car and my Ferrari drip oil (duh). Paper towel takes care of it.
     
  21. chadhaas

    chadhaas Formula Junior

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    Vault offers the same porcelain enamel tiles specified in Ferrari & Maserati showrooms throughout the world. This is also the same tile found on the factory floor in Modena, Italy.

    http://www.showroomgarage.com/products.tiles.html#

    Here is an overview of the product:

    Nothing looks nicer than a stone floor, just like those found in luxury car showrooms. But the trick has been finding a product that can withstand the heavy weight of vehicles, be resistant to abrasion, stains and liquid absorption and be easy to clean.

    Thanks to sophisticated new technologies, our high tech all natural porcelain ceramic provides an enhanced resistance to abrasions and acids compared to tiles that are quarried, such as granite or marble. These products evolved from porcelain technologies providing a technical ceramic with extraordinary performance characteristics.

    These high-tech ceramic tiles provide the highest quality product available in the international market today. It is not by chance that these tiles have become one of the most popular materials for interior and exterior installations and are used not only in the automotive showrooms, but even in the service departments and factory floors (Ferrari uses them in their factory in Modena).

    Proof of their superiority is the fact this type of high performance ceramics have been chosen to line the exterior of the space shuttle and are used in the brake systems of high performance vehicles, made by Porsche and Ferrari, chosen specifically for their durability over time.

    These flooring products were designed for Ferrari in close collaboration with designer Massimo Iosa Ghini (who also designed several lights featured in our lighting section) to project their corporate image across all of their dealer showrooms, while enduring the highest levels of stress, enormous traffic and the most persistent stains.

    Designed and installed exclusively at all Ferrari and Maserati showrooms throughout the world, they create just the right sense of style, technology, performance and beauty that defines Ferrari.

    These are also the porcelain tiles specified at Acura, Audi, Honda, Land Rover, Mercedes, Porsche, Nissan, Toyota, SAAB, and Volkswagen showrooms throughout the world.

    Nothing will showcase your vehicles better in your home than these Italian porcelain tiles available through Vault.

    Manufactured and imported from Italy.

    To order Vault's porcelain tiles, contact one of our flooring specialists at:
    (866) 828-5810.
     
  22. cessnav8or

    cessnav8or Formula 3

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    It doesn't creep through the cracks easily they fit pretty tight together. White tiles will stain a little if oil os left for a long period of time. My ferrari's oil cooler developed a leak and Ididnt catch it for about a month till the next time I pulled out of the garage. It wasn't bad though done some hard scrubing and for the most part it came of just not as bright as other white tiles. But it does't look like is seep thourgh the cracks from what I can tell.
     
  23. Cavallino Motors

    Cavallino Motors F1 World Champ Lifetime Rossa

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  24. chadhaas

    chadhaas Formula Junior

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  25. staceman

    staceman Karting

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