Thanks Ron & Stu. Appreciate the help.

Blain Haeg
Gold Standard Floor Care
512.257.3070 office
512.750.1242 cell
blain@goldstandardfloorcare.com
www.GoldStandardFloorCare.com

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On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:22 AM, Ron Moore <rmoore@americanstonecare.com> wrote:
Also, Grand Quartz has several dust shrouds that can be mounted on your angle grinder and hooked to your vac. This will minimize the potential for dust problems if you opt to use the cup wheel for removal.

Ron

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:53 AM, stuart rosen <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:
Good Point

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:51 AM, Ron Moore <rmoore@americanstonecare.com> wrote:

Regardless of what you find, if it's just concrete, once you grind it with the aggregate exposed it will resemble terrazzo. Easy!

Ron

On Nov 10, 2015 9:33 AM, "Blain Haeg" <blain@goldstandardfloorcare.com> wrote:

Fortunately, the client simply wants to have it ground flat with the existing floor regardless whether it's concrete or terrazzo. They are not interested in matching the area to the existing terrazzo if it is simply concrete.

So I just need some guidance on chipping away or grinding it before restoring the terrazzo in the same area.

Thanks for the input.

Blain Haeg
512.257.3070 office
512.750.1242 mobile
www.GoldStandardFloorCare.com

On Nov 10, 2015 8:28 AM, "stuart rosen" <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:
Blain
We do quite a few of these type jobs-You may find Terrazzo under that patch but I doubt it.
If you do-certainly follow Rons good advice.
If you don't-
You can take a small cut of the terrazzo(2"x2") and send it off to one of the terrazzo manufacturers.
If you measure the square footage they can tell you how much you will need to fill those spaces.
You can mix the fill by hand and then carefully grind it down to match the existing terrazzo.
Sounds easy-but it can be quite involved-and you will need some tooling to help you.
Kevin may chime in-he become quite adept at the technique himself.
He may have chuckled when he read Sounds easy!
 

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:04 AM, Ron Moore <rmoore@americanstonecare.com> wrote:

Blain,

I would suggest that you try using a demo hammer with a wide tip blade and attack this from the side. With luck the concrete will pop up doing little damage to the terrazzo which may be underneath. This will significantly reduce the time to grind this area. Once most of the concrete is removed then start the grinding with a 70 grit metal bond. If the demo hammer causes some of the material to pop out underneath and it is terrazzo there you can mix a knife grade epoxy, add color to match and fill any pits or holes. Go get it! Feel free to call me with any questions. Ron Moore 301.602.2307 cell.

Ron
American Stone Care, Inc.

On Nov 10, 2015 8:53 AM, "Blain Haeg" <blain@goldstandardfloorcare.com> wrote:
I've got a terrazzo floor restoration on a remodeled building. During the remodel, 4 pillars were removed, revealing a rough concrete surface that may or may not be overlaid on terrazzo. These areas are slightly higher than the terrazzo floor and each one is approximately 2 sq ft. I'm looking for guidance on what to grind with, before 50 grit diamond resins.

Thanks.

 
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