Concrete floors do not usually fail across the whole slab at once. The first damage often appears at the joint edge, where traffic, vibration, and repeated impact attack the weakest line of the surface.
Projects rarely begin with a product name. More often, they begin with a problem: joint edges breaking under forklift traffic, exposed slab lines wearing too fast, or connected concrete sections failing to stay stable under load.
Most concrete floor problems begin quietly. The surface still looks sound, but the joint line starts wearing faster than the rest of the slab, and that early weakness often decides how the whole floor performs later.
Not every concrete joint faces the same risk, so Armor Joint types only make sense when they are tied to the problem they are meant to solve.