flanagaj Posted yesterday at 11:24 Posted yesterday at 11:24 I want a power floated floor that will be acceptable as a finished floor without any polishing. Received a quote today and they want £32k inc vat for 140m2. I just cannot fathom how such ridiculous quotes can be arrived at. In fact, I find it insulting that these companies even try and charge that amount. It's 2 days work. I know some on here have power floated their own floors, but it's not something I really fancy trying myself, unless I maybe do the garage floor first and then do the house if that goes ok.
mjc55 Posted yesterday at 11:42 Posted yesterday at 11:42 Surely that is a mistake. Name and shame I say. 1
JohnMo Posted yesterday at 11:46 Posted yesterday at 11:46 They obviously don't want the work - move on to the next company 2
Alan Ambrose Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Don’t know how true it is, but I was told recently that power float skills are less and less common. Some people will try it on though if they have too much business / don’t fancy the job / think you’re a bit gullible. 1
flanagaj Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago 7 hours ago, Alan Ambrose said: Don’t know how true it is, but I was told recently that power float skills are less and less common. Some people will try it on though if they have too much business / don’t fancy the job / think you’re a bit gullible. I might have to have a rethink and do the floors in the conventional approach of a concrete slab and then insulation and screed at a later date, if I cannot find a company who can do the floors at a sensible price.
Jenki Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 19 hours ago, flanagaj said: I know some on here have power floated their own floors, but it's not something I really fancy trying myself, unless I maybe do the garage floor first and then do the house if that goes ok. I had never power floated, but budget said I had to try. and it was a fail. a few factors that didn't help: 1, It was really warm, yes highlands and it was 26deg. 2, not enough people. I had help from a neighbour and son, but they just helped get the concrete in, once in they left, leaving me and the wife. There just wasn't enough time to get the edges hand floated and the floors power floated. It wasn't terrible, just not good enough, ended up having to level compound some of the edges and grind a few high spots. so we opted for LVT. I one day might revisit and look at DIY epoxy.
saveasteading Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 20 hours ago, flanagaj said: power floated floor that will be acceptable as a finished floor without any polishing. Received a quote today and they want £32k inc vat for 140m2. I So you are building a very small industrial unit? These specialists do huge slabs, say 1000m2 in a day. They would turn up with 8 workers ,concrete pump, 3 power floats and all the kit. 2 of them stay overnight for the final polish. That isn't what you want is it? PFF is not good for a house. Can you explain why you want it?
JohnMo Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, Jenki said: It wasn't terrible, just not good enough, ended up having to level compound some of the edges and grind a few high spots That is hows ours ended up. Some self levelling compound and a grinder to a could high spots. I also had the option to have the whole polished with 2 guys staying overnight. If I was doing a polished floor, I think I would get it done before any internal walls went in. But as the wife hates it, I had no option so a simple paddle float it was. 1
-rick- Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 5 hours ago, flanagaj said: I might have to have a rethink and do the floors in the conventional approach of a concrete slab and then insulation and screed at a later date, if I cannot find a company who can do the floors at a sensible price. That sounds like you are thinking of switching from an insulated slab to a non-insulated one. Thats a different decision to just changing how you finish the floor. You'd need to get the drawings all adjusted as your levels will be out and it might affect the heat loss calculations + SAP too depending what you are doing. You can just top the insulated slab with a leveller and a normal floor finish if you just can't get the powerfloating done. That would save a lot of the rework of drawings etc, though you might need some depending how much height you are adding.
saveasteading Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago If you are insulating then screeding over the top , then the slab can be very ordinary in finish and level control. And thickness. The screed sorts it all out. @flanagaj can we go back a bit? Where are you on programme, floor construction logic? Who told you to go for power float? As you see above, people have tried and had to grind and fill, which defeats the object of a 'finished' surface
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