- Joined
- 11 Mar 2021
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- 14
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I got a steel shed in the garden last year. It has a concrete floor. I heard that these concrete floors can get crumbly and dusty, so when the floor was being laid I asked the builder if he had any recommendations on how seal the floor to help keep the dust down. He said to wait 2 months and then add 2 coats of PVA. I did this but I still found the surface was crumbly and dusty.
I thought maybe I hadn't added enough PVA last year, so a few weeks ago I decided to add another 2 coats. I think I made the WaterVA ratio to be 4:1 (whatever it said on the tub to use as a sealant). These additional coats definitely made an improvement as there is a visible surface PVA layer that is keeping the dust down.
However a problem I have is that if it is raining and the ground outside is wet, the rainwater on my shoes causes that surface PVA layer to stick to my shoes and come off. I have patches with no surface PVA layer around the floor from where I walked with my wet shoes. It seems that the PVA is reacting to the water.
I'm wondering if there is an alternative solution to this problem (maybe something to put over the PVA) as I often need to go into the shed on wet days.
I thought maybe I hadn't added enough PVA last year, so a few weeks ago I decided to add another 2 coats. I think I made the WaterVA ratio to be 4:1 (whatever it said on the tub to use as a sealant). These additional coats definitely made an improvement as there is a visible surface PVA layer that is keeping the dust down.
However a problem I have is that if it is raining and the ground outside is wet, the rainwater on my shoes causes that surface PVA layer to stick to my shoes and come off. I have patches with no surface PVA layer around the floor from where I walked with my wet shoes. It seems that the PVA is reacting to the water.
I'm wondering if there is an alternative solution to this problem (maybe something to put over the PVA) as I often need to go into the shed on wet days.