10-31-2022, 12:24 PM
Simon, I'm working on some links to help you with the battery project. Give me a bit. I'm also a bit behind on my free-time projects after creating all of those mock-ups for Andrew, lol.
Tom, I agree with you 110%, there is no comparison between polyaspartic vs epoxy when used in UV. Just one note: make sure you're using a high (should be 100%) aliphatic poly. And don't confuse polyurea, which many people do (polyurea is great if you need a 15 second flash time, lol).
I've never found it locally in South Florida. Of course I don't know much about distributors for that sort of thing. I've always ordered online; in one instance I ordered from China and it was perfectly fine.
Simon, when you refer to the "concrete stain" (marketing terminology only, as you observed, not a "stain" but merely a semi-opaque) that should never have been used where there is any sort of foot/vehicle traffic. I would avoid that contractor like the plague in the future. Even epoxy, despite the UV issues, would be exponentially more reliable, providing it was adhered properly (versus that concrete "stain").
Tom, I agree with you 110%, there is no comparison between polyaspartic vs epoxy when used in UV. Just one note: make sure you're using a high (should be 100%) aliphatic poly. And don't confuse polyurea, which many people do (polyurea is great if you need a 15 second flash time, lol).
I've never found it locally in South Florida. Of course I don't know much about distributors for that sort of thing. I've always ordered online; in one instance I ordered from China and it was perfectly fine.
Simon, when you refer to the "concrete stain" (marketing terminology only, as you observed, not a "stain" but merely a semi-opaque) that should never have been used where there is any sort of foot/vehicle traffic. I would avoid that contractor like the plague in the future. Even epoxy, despite the UV issues, would be exponentially more reliable, providing it was adhered properly (versus that concrete "stain").