Great job. Good for one person but extra help is needed to keep mixing the material for consistency in the paint for an even ball bounce over the entire court.
Most surface paint is textured unless you want faster play then there is paint with no sand etc to look smoother and allow faster play. Squeegee is the best option if handled right.
great video on how to DIY. But what about the lines? Just mask both inside and outside and paint it with normal white paint? or same kind of paint for the coating?
To a degree. There is some marking cause by the squegge but most of the marking comes in a uniform pattern like lines. Inadequate Application could be a reason for excessive marking as well. So many variants but, Yes there is marking left most of the time
the way one company does it suggests two coats. dang this would be time consuming at this rate. Might need more helpers. Time is money, so this must be profitable.
Yes, time is money. 99% of the court surfaces need two coats, but applying sport coatings with a squeegee is the fastest painting method over a large area. It would typically take 2 men three half-days to apply two coats to a tennis court the size of those in this video. The roller method is much slower, but you can break up the job into smaller pieces, doing it as time allows.