Anti-slip treatments — chemical etching, applied coatings, mechanical re-finishing — produce a claimed PTV uplift on polished or worn floors. Independent before-and-after pendulum testing under UKAS accreditation is the only way to verify that the uplift claimed has actually been achieved.
Common treatments fall into a few categories:
Treatment providers will quote a typical or expected PTV uplift, but actual uplift on a specific surface depends on the substrate condition, the application technique, the cleaning regime that follows, and the curing conditions. Independent UKAS-accredited testing measures what was actually achieved on this floor, not what was achieved on the manufacturer's reference samples.
Initial post-treatment PTV is one piece of evidence. Durability of the uplift is another. For demanding environments, follow-up testing at 6 and 12 months captures whether the treatment is holding or whether traffic and cleaning have eroded the gain. Some treatments achieve a strong initial uplift that decays substantially in the first year; others are more durable.
Treatment is most appropriate where the substrate is intact and visually acceptable, the slip-resistance shortfall is moderate (PTV gap of 5–25 points), and the operating environment is not so aggressive that the treatment will be quickly lost. For severely worn, mechanically damaged or fundamentally mis-specified floors, replacement is often a better path.
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