Plan grinding production with realistic job inputs. Compare pass counts and overlap. Get time, disc usage, and cost estimates for smoother scheduling.
| Scenario | Area | Passes | Width | Speed | Overlap | Efficiency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light prep | 300 ft^2 | 1 | 10 in | 14 ft/min | 15% | 75% |
| Coating removal | 600 ft^2 | 2 | 10 in | 12 ft/min | 20% | 70% |
| Hard grind | 900 ft^2 | 3 | 12 in | 10 ft/min | 25% | 60% |
The calculator estimates grinding productivity from travel speed and path width, then adjusts for overlap and jobsite efficiency.
Use conservative efficiency for tight rooms, heavy edging, or frequent tool moves.
Grinding coverage is jobsite area treated per hour, not deck size. This tool estimates production from travel speed, effective path width, overlap, and an efficiency factor. Use it to plan crew hours, sequencing, and takeoff checks on slabs, toppings, and coating removal. Metric users can enter meters and millimeters; outputs convert to m^2/hour for easy reporting and to share with owners and inspectors.
Light prep often lands near 250–600 ft^2/hour per operator. Coating removal commonly drops to 150–350 ft^2/hour. Hard grind or flattening may run 80–200 ft^2/hour. If your result is far outside these bands, revisit overlap, passes, speed, and efficiency.
Effective width shrinks with overlap. A 10-inch path at 20% overlap uses only 80% per lane. Speed should match the slowest stable pace that keeps consistent scratch and vacuum control. Pushing faster can reduce quality and create rework that wipes out gains.
One pass may suit light profiling before coatings, while two or more passes are common for thicker films or weak adhesion. Polishing sequences usually need additional passes with higher overlap. Enter total passes you expect, including any cross-hatching or direction changes.
Columns, joints, drains, and tight rooms reduce straight runs. The edges add-on accounts for hand work and extra repositioning. Open warehouses often fit 5–10%. Mechanical rooms, stairs, or retail fit-outs may need 15–30%.
Disc life swings with hardness, aggregate exposure, moisture, and grit. Hard concrete can burn diamonds; soft concrete can glaze tooling. Track actual ft^2 per disc on a few jobs, then update your baseline so disc counts and consumables costs stay believable.
Labor and equipment rates apply to calculated hours, while consumables follow disc life. For bidding, keep efficiency conservative and add contingency. For scheduling, compare scenarios: higher overlap improves blend but extends duration; fewer passes saves time but may risk coating performance.
After 30–60 minutes, measure treated area and back-calculate actual ft^2/hour. Adjust efficiency, overlap, and disc life to match observed performance. Recalibrating these inputs per crew and slab condition quickly improves forecast accuracy.
Use dimensions when you have measured length and width. Use total area when takeoffs are already summarized. Both paths convert to the same internal area before adjustments.
Efficiency accounts for non-grinding time: repositioning, cord management, vacuum checks, edge work coordination, and short breaks. It does not change slab hardness; it reflects real jobsite flow.
Use 10–15% for fast prep on open slabs. Use 20–30% when you need a more uniform scratch, better blend lines, or when polishing steps require tighter lane spacing.
Adjusted area adds allowances for edges, obstructions, and contingency. These factors represent extra effort that does not appear in plan dimensions but still consumes time and tooling.
Start with a conservative baseline, then track actual square footage per disc on site. Update disc life by concrete hardness and grit. This quickly improves consumables and cost accuracy.
Yes. Run separate calculations for each room type or phase, then add hours and discs. Different layouts and obstacles can change efficiency, so splitting scenarios often gives better schedules.
Indirectly. Dust control affects how fast you can travel without leaving lines or clogging filters. Reflect that impact by lowering efficiency or speed when the vacuum setup or ventilation is limiting.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.