Walmart has
180-Oz Rust-Oleum RockSolid Polycuramine Garage Floor Coating Kit (500 sq ft, Dark Gray, High Gloss, 317284) for
$176.99.
Shipping is free.
Walmart also has
90-Oz Rust-Oleum RockSolid Polycuramine Garage Floor Top Coating Kit (500 sq ft, Clear, High Gloss, 282829) for
$151.78.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
klpps for finding this deal.
About this item:
- Durable, long-lasting, industrial grade garage floor coating kit
- 20x stronger than epoxy with excellent resistance to oil, gas, salt and other harsh chemicals
- Outstanding protection from hot tire pick-up, impact and abrasions to maintain the appearance of the floor
- Accepts foot traffic in 8 to 10 hours and drive on in only 24 hours
- Low odor and low VOC formula delivers a high-gloss, showroom quality finish
- 2.5 car kit covers up to 500 square feet
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Top Comments
Prep is key, for a true long term solution, you want to rent a grinder and scuff the surface before application. I just pressure washed it and made sure it was super dry and it still performed better than expected. I managed to chip some spots, but we're talking about doing something like dropping a differential accidentally off of a jack. If you're not a genuine hobby mechanic, this stuff would probably last you 15+ years if you do it right.
Immediate warnings:
Buy at least twice what you think you will use, if your surface is raw, there is not even close to enough in 1 kit. The 2.5 kit MIGHT cover a 1 car garage
Success is in prep, if you don't have a clean, porous, oil free surface, ANY product will fail fast.
This stuff is extremely slippery if you don't add a friction agent, dangerously so. Mine was like glass if it got wet even years later. This was with flakes also, but no friction additive. I'd order extra flakes and a clear coat kit if I did a DIY again, it would add better traction and durability IMO. It doesn't come with enough flakes for 100% coverage.
Other than it being quite durable, things I liked:
-RockSolid comes in burst pouches, it's very easy to mix. Tool free, just pop the pouch and shake it up, dump it on the floor, squeegee or roll it around
-Price is higher than the usual kits but it's low enough to consider it over a pro job (You're looking at around 3+ grand for a true professional job, it is worth it, but it's an order of magnitude higher)
-This is a different agent than the cheaper epoxy kits. It's a stage more durable, but probably a stage or two worse than what a $$$$ pro job would use (Polyaspartic resin usually being top of the line)
-edit-
Yeah the price of this stuff is way up lately, but swings back and forth. I'd say if you are in the market for this stuff, stock up on this deal - this is a great today price.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank HitechRedneck
Prep is key, for a true long term solution, you want to rent a grinder and scuff the surface before application. I just pressure washed it and made sure it was super dry and it still performed better than expected. I managed to chip some spots, but we're talking about doing something like dropping a differential accidentally off of a jack. If you're not a genuine hobby mechanic, this stuff would probably last you 15+ years if you do it right.
Immediate warnings:
Buy at least twice what you think you will use, if your surface is raw, there is not even close to enough in 1 kit. The 2.5 kit MIGHT cover a 1 car garage
Success is in prep, if you don't have a clean, porous, oil free surface, ANY product will fail fast.
This stuff is extremely slippery if you don't add a friction agent, dangerously so. Mine was like glass if it got wet even years later. This was with flakes also, but no friction additive. I'd order extra flakes and a clear coat kit if I did a DIY again, it would add better traction and durability IMO. It doesn't come with enough flakes for 100% coverage.
Other than it being quite durable, things I liked:
-RockSolid comes in burst pouches, it's very easy to mix. Tool free, just pop the pouch and shake it up, dump it on the floor, squeegee or roll it around
-Price is higher than the usual kits but it's low enough to consider it over a pro job (You're looking at around 3+ grand for a true professional job, it is worth it, but it's an order of magnitude higher)
-This is a different agent than the cheaper epoxy kits. It's a stage more durable, but probably a stage or two worse than what a $$$$ pro job would use (Polyaspartic resin usually being top of the line)
-edit-
Yeah the price of this stuff is way up lately, but swings back and forth. I'd say if you are in the market for this stuff, stock up on this deal - this is a great today price.
Prep is key, for a true long term solution, you want to rent a grinder and scuff the surface before application. I just pressure washed it and made sure it was super dry and it still performed better than expected. I managed to chip some spots, but we're talking about doing something like dropping a differential accidentally off of a jack. If you're not a genuine hobby mechanic, this stuff would probably last you 15+ years if you do it right.
Immediate warnings:
Buy at least twice what you think you will use, if your surface is raw, there is not even close to enough in 1 kit. The 2.5 kit MIGHT cover a 1 car garage
Success is in prep, if you don't have a clean, porous, oil free surface, ANY product will fail fast.
This stuff is extremely slippery if you don't add a friction agent, dangerously so. Mine was like glass if it got wet even years later. This was with flakes also, but no friction additive. I'd order extra flakes and a clear coat kit if I did a DIY again, it would add better traction and durability IMO. It doesn't come with enough flakes for 100% coverage.
Other than it being quite durable, things I liked:
-RockSolid comes in burst pouches, it's very easy to mix. Tool free, just pop the pouch and shake it up, dump it on the floor, squeegee or roll it around
-Price is higher than the usual kits but it's low enough to consider it over a pro job (You're looking at around 3+ grand for a true professional job, it is worth it, but it's an order of magnitude higher)
-edit-
Yeah the price of this stuff is way up lately, but swings back and forth. I'd say if you are in the market for this stuff, stock up on this deal - this is a great today price.
I'd DIY an epoxy/poly job but I probably wouldn't do it with stain myself. One covers all of your mistakes and concrete's imperfactions up, the other will highlight them lol
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank nocturnalmerkin
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I had the same experience as everyone else. Worked like a champ for our farm out building- and I was very hard on it. You know how a little paint goes a long way? That's not the case with this, you need much more than you think, and color can vary from batch to batch, so match those lot codes.
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