System Overview
For concrete and asphalt floors, two pack line marking systems are specified where single pack paints are unlikely to provide sufficient durability under regular vehicle movement, turning traffic, pallet handling, or repeated wash-down. This collection covers water-based epoxy, solvent-based epoxy, and polyaspartic line marking materials intended for professional application across prepared mineral and bituminous substrates.
Within the EVEREST Everflor range, these systems are positioned for trade and industrial environments where line clarity, abrasion resistance, and stronger substrate adhesion are required without moving immediately into very high-build specialist marking coatings. They are typically selected for car parks, warehouses, logistics facilities, factory floors, loading areas, and service yards where traffic intensity is moderate to high and coating failure from scrub wear or tyre contact must be reduced.
Suitable Substrates & Surface Preparation
Concrete and asphalt require different preparation logic, even where the same line marking performance is expected. On concrete, the substrate should be sound, dry enough for the selected resin system, and free from laitance, curing residues, dust, grease, and previous weak coatings. Dense or power-floated concrete may need mechanical preparation to establish a reliable key, particularly where epoxy systems are being applied in thinner marking sections.
On asphalt, adhesion depends heavily on surface condition, binder stability, and contamination control. The substrate must be clean, structurally intact, and free from loose fines, oil, tyre residue, and friable surface degradation. Fresh or soft bituminous surfaces may not provide a sufficiently stable base for rigid two pack systems, particularly where heavy turning forces or elevated summer surface temperatures are expected.
Because these are activated coatings, correct mix ratio, induction requirements where applicable, and controlled application within stated pot life are central to performance. Poorly mixed material, over-thinning, or use beyond workable pot life can reduce cure consistency, edge definition, and long-term adhesion. Surface sealers, primers, or anti-slip aggregates may also form part of the wider specification depending on porosity, traffic type, and slip risk.
Performance Characteristics & Limitations
Compared with single pack marking paints, two pack systems generally provide stronger abrasion resistance, improved tyre resistance, and better retention of line definition in frequently trafficked areas. Epoxy-based options are commonly chosen for robust bond strength and resistance to mechanical wear and routine chemical exposure, while polyaspartic variants are often considered where rapid curing and faster return to service are operational priorities.
Water-based epoxy systems can offer lower odour application characteristics and practical use on suitable prepared substrates, but cure development and application behaviour remain dependent on site temperature and moisture conditions. Solvent-based epoxy systems may be preferred where stronger penetration or alternative application characteristics are beneficial, although substrate and environmental suitability still need careful review. Polyaspartic systems can reduce downtime significantly, but fast reactivity increases the importance of planning, mixing discipline, and application control.
These coatings are not a universal solution. They are not suited to flexible substrates, structurally unsound surfaces, or poorly prepared existing markings. Limited pot life, temperature sensitivity, and moisture-related cure disruption remain practical constraints. On asphalt in particular, system rigidity and substrate movement must be considered before specification.
Internal vs External Considerations
Internally, line marking systems are usually selected around abrasion profile, forklift or pallet truck traffic, wash-down exposure, and the need for clean visual demarcation within production or logistics spaces. Chemical resistance and tyre marking resistance are often more relevant than weathering performance in these settings, especially on concrete warehouse and factory floors.
Externally, the balance shifts towards rainfall, standing water risk, UV exposure, seasonal temperature variation, and the behaviour of the substrate under thermal movement. Concrete service yards and asphalt traffic routes can both experience contamination from oils, road dirt, and de-icing residues, but external asphalt also introduces greater movement and heat-cycle considerations. Where operational shutdown windows are short, fast-cure polyaspartic systems may offer a practical advantage over conventional epoxy line marking technologies.
Selection Guidance & When to Specify Alternatives
This collection is generally appropriate where a resin-based floor marking system is needed for concrete or asphalt subject to regular traffic, but where the project does not yet demand a very high-build marking coating. It suits professional contractors and facilities teams seeking stronger service life than one pack systems can normally provide.
Specify alternatives where the site has exceptional turning stress, severe impact abrasion, or a requirement for heavier film build and longer wear under aggressive traffic patterns. In those cases, a heavier-duty marking coating may be more appropriate. Where access restrictions demand the shortest possible return-to-service window, fast-cure polyaspartic marking systems should be assessed carefully against substrate condition, working time, and installation logistics.