We got the ceiling over as far as we could go due to all the crap out of one of my storage units I emptied out to save on the monthly rent. So we have about 2/3 of the ceiling done, 12 lights hung, so it was time to move onto the floor. I bought this paint in December, yep, last year. It's been sitting patiently in the corner taking up space til now. I rented a floor grinder, yet another long story, and after a ton of self teaching/learning/experimenting, was able to get the floor 'prepped' for the paint to be applied. It was 3 days of my life I will never get back and really don't look forward to repeating. After you spend countless hours fighting this machine that wants to do its own thing and go its own way, and keep it on course, you are left with the sahara desert in your garage. Yep, back in Afghanistan it was for me, inch thick layer of dusty nastiness. Oh yeah, this shit laughs at a broom. I swept till my arms were going to fall off, got it to where you could see the floor, and realized there were a ton of untouched places, so went over a second and partial third time(this was because at the beginning I said it was a learning experience, right? Well, I didn't have the machine set up correctly, so my bad!). Finally it was ready. I had Cam manning the paint mixing station while Neil and I applied the paint. Oh wait, how did I get the desert out of my garage? Well, years ago my wife bought a huge Craftsman shop vac for me, and I went up and bought a new filter, pre filter and a filter bag. That bag is the shit, let me tell you. It worked great, kept the filter from getting clogged and kept suction at height that would make a $1k hooker blush. So after sweeping, I put the water squeegee attachment on it and basically went up and down row after row, until I had vacuumed all the loose stuff up. Then we masked out our sections for painting and began applying the paint. This is not for the faint of heart. Huge thanks to Cam and Neil. I think for our first time, it turned out beautifully. Not perfect, but really, really nice. No, that's not wet, that's dry paint. Yes, it is that shiny. It is polyaspartic paint