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Polyaspartic Floor Repair Stargazer

peterso2

Member
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
16
Hello,

I had a company come out and fix a few spots in my polyaspartic floor. The apron was worn- easy fix without tons of tear out. My spots were maybe half dollar size —but they started to remove and ripped up a huge area of sheets. Now after the top coat is drying I notice it doesn’t blend in well. I knew it probably wouldn’t be a 1:1 match but over time will it get better?

Do we think over time the flooring will blend in any better? It appears there is some feather lines with heavy topcoat around the area. I’m pretty unhappy and would’ve rather left it how it was. But if it was pulled up easily- maybe it was failing anyways? He pulled up some large sheets rather quickly.
 

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dcg9381

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 20, 2018
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11,604
Location
Austin, TX
Hello,

I had a company come out and fix a few spots in my polyaspartic floor. The apron was worn- easy fix without tons of tear out. My spots were maybe half dollar size —but they started to remove and ripped up a huge area of sheets. Now after the top coat is drying I notice it doesn’t blend in well. I knew it probably wouldn’t be a 1:1 match but over time will it get better?
I did a polyurea floor in the garage (new concrete). I didn't grind and I didn't etch.. Big mistake. I have spots coming up where tires sit. Exactly like yours. To "repair" them, I've done same as you I grind it all off and feather it in. That seems to have stopped it, but I've not found a good way to "blend" it and make it look right. I think what I'm going to do is actually grind out larger areas, like 3'x3' and then treat not try to blend them, but keep them symetrical looking.. Basically create "pads" that will look slightly different.

Only way I know to make it all match is to grind it all off..
 
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peterso2

Member
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
16
The company says in about a month it should weather out some…thoughts?
 

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peterso2

Member
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
16
Thanks! I don’t think it’s horrible every repair I guess you will notice to some degree initially. Maybe I should relax and be glad it was corrected to hold up better
 
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peterso2

Member
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
16
I did a polyurea floor in the garage (new concrete). I didn't grind and I didn't etch.. Big mistake. I have spots coming up where tires sit. Exactly like yours. To "repair" them, I've done same as you I grind it all off and feather it in. That seems to have stopped it, but I've not found a good way to "blend" it and make it look right. I think what I'm going to do is actually grind out larger areas, like 3'x3' and then treat not try to blend them, but keep them symetrical looking.. Basically create "pads" that will look slightly different.

Only way I know to make it all match is to grind it all off..
Help me cope..I’m so depressed I tried to have the company address some minor issues and now I have a floor that looks way worse. I’m so sad.
 
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