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Floor Machine Pads for Scrubbing, Polishing, and Stripping
The Color Code System: What Each Pad Grade Actually Does
The industry-standard color code for floor pads exists to prevent the most common and costly mistake in floor care: using the wrong abrasive grade on finished floors. Black pads carry the most aggressive grit and are designed strictly for stripping finish from resilient tile, vinyl composite, and concrete before refinishing. Brown pads sit just above black in aggressiveness and handle heavy scrubbing on floors where finish build-up needs to be reduced rather than removed entirely.
Red pads are the workhorse of daily commercial maintenance. They scrub light soil and scuff marks from finish without cutting into the finish layers themselves, making them appropriate for nightly or high-frequency cleaning passes on VCT, LVT, and polished concrete in high-traffic corridors, retail floors, and school hallways. White pads operate at a finer grade suited to spray buffing and light polishing, where the objective is restoring gloss between deep scrubs rather than removing contamination. Blue pads fall between red and white in aggressiveness and work well on lightly soiled floors that need more than a polish but less than a scrub. Facility managers who maintain pad inventory for multiple building types keep at least three grades stocked to handle whatever condition a floor presents after an event or weather-driven soil load.
Matching Pad Diameter and Machine Speed to Floor Type
Pad diameter must match the driver plate on the floor machine exactly. A pad that overlaps the driver by more than half an inch flexes unevenly under rotation, creating streaks and uneven wear patterns that show on polished floors under direct lighting. Standard commercial rotary machines run 17, 19, 20, and 21-inch pads, while larger walk-behind floor scrubbers in the 24 to 27-inch range require correspondingly larger pads for full driver coverage.
Machine speed is the other variable that changes how a pad performs. Low-speed rotary machines operate between 175 and 250 RPM, which gives scrubbing and stripping pads the dwell time they need to break down finish or soil without generating heat that can smear or redeposit residue. High-speed burnishers run from 1,000 to 2,000 RPM and require pads specifically designed for those speeds. Standard scrubbing pads will glaze, disintegrate, or produce uneven results at burnisher speeds. The OSHA general industry housekeeping standard 1910.22 establishes the baseline for safe floor surface maintenance in commercial and industrial facilities, which purchasing managers use as a reference when building floor care protocols for their properties.
Related: Floor Buffers · Walk-Behind Floor Scrubbers · Floor Care Equipment
How Pad Grit Selection Affects Finish Longevity and Labor Cost
The financial case for correct pad selection is straightforward for any facility team managing floor care costs across a building portfolio. Using a pad that is too aggressive removes finish coats faster than the maintenance schedule replaces them, which compresses the refinishing cycle and increases material and labor spend per square foot per year. Using a pad that is too mild leaves soil in finish layers that dull appearance between cleaning cycles, which drives up frequency of deep cleaning to maintain the appearance standard required by the facility's tenant agreements or institutional standards.
High-quality melamine, polyester, and nylon fiber pads also outlast budget alternatives on a per-square-foot-cleaned basis, meaning total cost of ownership favors the higher upfront investment. Commercial janitorial supply managers running multi-site operations track pad life by tracking how many 1,000-square-foot passes a given pad completes before it no longer holds its grade consistently. EPA guidance on greener cleaning approaches for schools also supports low-chemical floor maintenance programs that rely on mechanical pad action rather than high-pH strippers, which dovetails with the ongoing shift toward safer chemical use in occupied school buildings and healthcare facilities.