Best to remove the epoxy first, otherwise you could experience some peeling issues. If you insist on not removing the epoxy, be sure to remove any grease or oil, clean and sand the surface flat so the floor paint has a solid surface to gain a tenacious bond.
you can't paint silicon... however you can paint contact cement... clean silicone , paint with contact cement carefully ,paint contact cement with your paint, covering all contact cement
Almost any kind, including epoxy enamel.
I think that you would need to do a layer of primer, then a layer of epoxy might be best.Epoxy is what's recommended for garage floors, I think it would work on your parking symbols. For more information on the joys of epoxy:http://www.housepaintingtutorials.com/epoxy-garage-floor-covering.html
The best way to get paint to adhere to stainless steel is to use an etching epoxy primer specifically made for stainless applications. Latex paint and oil-based paint are most commonly used.
I am guessing this is on the floor. This is probably a two component carbon bond coating. This means it is chemical resistant to even ketones. To recoat, you must use another epoxy or urethane mixture. To prepare the surface, it must be wet sanded with at least 220 grit water paper. After a good sanding, the surface must be cleaned with some sorta tack cloth. If you use a waxed based tack, do not press hard. This will cause transfere of the bees wax to the surface and cause poor adhesion. Anyway, get the surface clean as possible. Make sure the humidity is below 50% before coating the area. If you try to coat with humidity aboue 50%, you may get bubbles in your coating. They are caused by the coating trying to cure quicker than the moisture can escape. I hope you can use this information.
you can't paint silicon... however you can paint contact cement... clean silicone , paint with contact cement carefully ,paint contact cement with your paint, covering all contact cement
You can mix acrylic paint with epoxy for a durable and long-lasting finish.
Almost any kind, including epoxy enamel.
How much? what kind of plywood floor? Why do you need to do this??
I recommend a good epoxy paint with the Uv resistant seeler.
The nice thing about an Epoxy floor is it is very tough. So virtually any houshold floor cleaner. Most degreasers and car wash soaps will do a good job as well.
I think that you would need to do a layer of primer, then a layer of epoxy might be best.Epoxy is what's recommended for garage floors, I think it would work on your parking symbols. For more information on the joys of epoxy:http://www.housepaintingtutorials.com/epoxy-garage-floor-covering.html
I,v got over 20 years inpainting. application, you know...learned it the hard way. painting over epoxy is always tricky.( I,m talking about the two part epoxy) if you start with epoxy and stick with epoxy, usually you'lldo just fine. any kind of latex paintwill lift off of epoxy. oil paint will stick a bit longer, but that's coming up to.thewhole point of epoxy is to have nothingstickto its surfaceso thatit cleans easy.you can try and strip it, messy and time consuming. now your mixing chemicals. one tip.. take a piece of sand paper, sand a small area. if what you sanded leaves dust.. I would paint that. if balls up or rolls? its the same as painting over rubber. hopes this helps.
The best way to get paint to adhere to stainless steel is to use an etching epoxy primer specifically made for stainless applications. Latex paint and oil-based paint are most commonly used.
Epoxy itself is glue that will hold to metal.
The absolute bees knees paint would be an epoxy paint. That is the kind that we used to use on microwave transmission towers. It is also used on garage floors. As an alternative, you might consider using a concrete stain.
Get it sealed. Concrete will weep moisture because its very porous. There are many different kinds of sealants out there and your local home improvement supplier will tell how you the best kind to apply. You paint it on like normal paint and it will make the concrete look shiny like a varnished piece of wood. This is due to the ground water wanting to rise back up through the floor.