If poo/bedding gets 'glued on' to vinyl it may just mean you need deeper bedding overall, a droppings board under the roost, or to fix a leak. BTW, a small area of 'glued on' stuff comes off easily if you pour water on it, flop a rag on top to keep thw water from running off or evaporating, leave it a while, then scrape it off w/ a plastic dustpan. Any leftover water can either be dried off with rags, or absorbed with shavings which you then sweep up and discard outside.
Quote:
I cannot see that it is likely to matter too much, as long as it has a smooth shiny surface, is tightly installed, and sensibly treated.
Quote:
I am skeptical that the edges could be sealed well enough for waterproofing purposes. If you really wanted a drain I think the best approach would be to mimic the safe type of horse wash stall, with the floor sloped down to the midpoint of one exterior side and a flush-with-flooring hole cut thru exterior wall to let water drain away. But getting the floor graded properly would be a bugger.
Dunno how other people do it, but here is the deal on the vinyl in our chickens' winter quarters. their pen was originally several indoor dog pens in what used to be a dog boarding kennel building. The vinyl was already there when we bought the place. It is nailed along the edges onto plywood-on-a-stud-base floor. No trim of any kind along the edges where it meets the wall; metal angle trim covering edge of vinyl in doorways so you don't trip on the edge or pry it up when going in. The walls (up to 4') are covered in some weird heavy plastic panels, about 1/2" thick, to resist pawing by dogs.
The rest of the building's (concrete) floor does have a floor drain, but it is anyone's guess whether the actual pens were ever hosed. (I'd bet they were, but *I* sure wouldn't do it, at least not regularly!). The plywood under the vinyl is rather mungy looking (I've replaced some vinyl) but after all the kennel's been there for maybe 15+ years. The vinyl does not seem to have held up terrifically under dog use, as some has clearly been replaced/patchd/layered-over multiple times; the problems are peeling of edges when vinyl cracks at nail holes, and cracking where it was initially installed over a ridge in floor or with a 'hill' sticking up in the vinyl.
When I converted part for chickens, I had to re-vinyl because of age and because I removed the partitions between some pens leaving bare strips. I used a staple gun (liberally!), plus metal battens screwed across the vinyl every 4' to help keep it flatter. The vinyl is a tiny bit wavy and 'hilly' still, but I think it'll do for a good while. If the edges start breaking up, I will screw thru a batten or quarter-round to keep them in place.
The key, for me, is to keep LOTS AND LOTS AND LOTS of shavings on top of it. Not only is the vinyl really slippery for the chickens if hte bedding gets scratched away from it, *I* get to slipping on the vinyl when I walk in there if there is less than maybe 4-6" of packed shavings. And I have to be careful that if I swivel on the ball of my foot to turn around, I have to scuff the shavings back in place because it usually exposes the vinyl.
So on the whole I really like the vinyl but it does have its idiosyncrasies, mainly the thing about needing good bedding depth.
Pat