Manufacturer | - |
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Brand | ONLINE |
Item model number | GF75CN822SN |
Color | Beige |
Weight | - |
Height | - |
Depth | - |
Product Id | 874323 |
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User Reviews and Ratings | 3 (1 ratings) 3 out of 5 stars |
UPC | 736608101039 |
# | Title | Reviews | User Ratings | Price |
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1 |
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G-floor Garage Floor Cover/protector, 8'
Price:
$283.8
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(4.6) |
$283.8
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Mat works well. Durable and lays flat. Stopped car tires from tearing up cement garage floor. No more tire indentations. Tires were beginning to make ruts in floor. Great product..
I ordered 2 roll-out Garage Floor covers so that my entire floor would be covered. Never expected them to be as heavy-duty as they are, but I am pleased with that because I expect they will last forever! They rolled out nicely and matched up at the seam. Given the sub-artic temps we are having right now, I do not expect the corners to lay flat until things warm up a bit. I laid some heavy objects at each corner to help with this. I am considering getting seam tape to keep both pieces together, but hope this is not necessary as that tape is pricey. Overall I am VERY pleased with the product and would recommend it in a minute. I chose G-Floor because I wanted to protect my brand-new garage floor but it was too cold to pour out epoxy or even a plain water-seal product. Once warm weather comes I plan to roll up the G-Floor, apply Thompson's water-seal and then place the G-Floor back again. It looks great.
already recommended it to a friend. Even layed well during winter installation.
I purchased the thicker commercial pad and was pleasantly surprised with the thickness. the advertised 8' wide pad was actually 8'- 0 3/4".
Two car garage concrete floor had several coats of solvent based paint. Researched alternatives including removing all existing paint and starting over with a two part epoxy or "poured" type floor. Instead of starting over, ordered 3, 8 x 22 rolls of sandstone G-Floor. Critical to unroll the product and let it sit for days or a week. OK to unroll each roll on top of one another. For where the 2 seams will meet, I removed with paint remover a 6 to 8 inch swath and then with a hand held finishing sander I sanded each swath with 60 grit paper. The center section was laid down first and then the left and right sections were butted to it. Did some initial trim work so the material would lay as flat as possible overnight. Then where each seam is I rolled back the flooring to expose the prepared concrete seams. Video I watched showed duct taping the rolled back portions but that was not necessary. G-Floor adhesive was applied to the bard concrete. Took several hours for the adhesive to turn from milky white to clear. Then applied G-Floor 4' tape to the adhesive. This kept the tape from possible shifting and the over brush of the adhesive would add extra holding power. The rolled back flooring sections were then "allowed" to lay flat. I used a rubber mallet and a short section of 2x4 to assure the seams were butted and adhered to the floor. The only negative in the product is that 2 of the 3 rolls were not cut perfectly straight (i.e., identical width). There are two 30" or so portions where the seams are unable to be butted and those portions of the seams are visible (about a 1/8th" to 3/16th" gap. Trying to think of something to use to fill the gap that would blend with the sandstone. Time will tell how the floor holds up and whether and what may stain or discolor it. However it looks fabulous and final result was well worth the effort.