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I am interested in your points of view on what sort of paint should be used on a factory floor. Where I work we have just finished repainting our factory floor with a high gloss finish masonary paint. That is where the problem lies as far as a lot of the workforace are concerned.
We use water and other liquids constantly and the floor gets wet. Being a gloss finish the water stays on top of the paint and makes the floor very slippery. One of my colleagues has argued that it is illegal for the company to use a gloss paint and that according to him "it has to has some kind of grit mixture in it if the floor may become wet".
I am wondering if he is right and if he is what sort of regs, or Acops, may cover his statement, or is there no restriction apart from common sense on what sort of paint a company can use on a factory floor.
Mike
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Rank: Super forum user
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Rank: Forum user
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martinw just beat me to it. I am not aware of any regs that say you must use gritted paint, but the Workplace regs and ACOP does cover conditions of floors etc ( eg Reg 12) http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/priced/l24.pdfUsing gritted paint may be a way to comply - but there may be others.
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Rank: Forum user
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Rank: Forum user
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Thanks for your advice I will try to get the matter raised at the next H&S meeting with regards to the Workplace regs and see what happens from there.
Mike
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Rank: Super forum user
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I experienced this problem when working in a factory, the floor was painted and suddenly everyone was falling over, especially in wet weather.
One answer is to mix grit, or buy gritted paint, problem with this is when you have vehicles (FLT's) the grit makes the paint wear and it looks dirty and horrible.
IMO gloss paint should not be applied to a floor as it will be slippery, even when weather is dry, depending on footwear?
Matt is OK but not as attractive as gloss.
If it is just a wet weather problem look into good quality mats for the entrances, the type that takes maximum water from footwear, and make sure they are long enough into the building to take more than a few steps.
I fear you may have to repaint the floor?
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Rank: Forum user
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One thing to look at, if you go for the gritted paint route, actual floor paint with grit in it is extortionately priced.
We did it at my last place for working on top of fixed containers, we bought a good quaity enamel paint from B&Q (lots of it, and many bags of sharp sand.
Cost about a fraction of the advertised stuff, Job Done.
i actually got a sample of the grit paint from a H&S supplier, it was basically exactly the same stuff we made up.
But as has been said, repainting the floor may be the simplest option.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Rank: Super forum user
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