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[email protected] July 23rd 07 11:08 PM

tile thickness - door scraping
 
My garage entry door swings out onto a slab (which is an entry way I
wanted to dress up with tile to hile the concrete crack) There is
only the clearance about the height of aluminum threshold approx.
1/2" . Too bad when I installed the door I forgot about the tiles I
wanted to install.

I put a piece of tile to test and the sweeper of the door scrapes it a
bit but still operable (not considering the thinset yet) I think I
will have to remove the sweeper. It would be nice to have some kind
of sealing at the bottom of the door, but it's only a garage door.

Is there any way to gain the clearance or minimize the thickness of
tiles installation..? Can a masonary grinding wheel be used to remove
slight amount of material in the door swing area? The area is
covered so there is no standing water.

I do not want to re-hang the door or convert to in-swing door.
Maybe a concrete stain or patio paint with the appropiate patch to
seal the crack is a better solution?

Thanks in advance.


Chris Friesen July 23rd 07 11:18 PM

tile thickness - door scraping
 
wrote:
My garage entry door swings out onto a slab (which is an entry way I
wanted to dress up with tile to hile the concrete crack) There is
only the clearance about the height of aluminum threshold approx.
1/2" . Too bad when I installed the door I forgot about the tiles I
wanted to install.


snip

Is there any way to gain the clearance or minimize the thickness of
tiles installation..?


Shorten the door, or use a different type of sweep that fastens to the
side of the door rather than the bottom.

Chris

Oren July 24th 07 02:13 AM

tile thickness - door scraping
 
On Mon, 23 Jul 2007 22:08:21 -0000, wrote:

My garage entry door swings out onto a slab (which is an entry way I
wanted to dress up with tile to hile the concrete crack) There is
only the clearance about the height of aluminum threshold approx.
1/2" . Too bad when I installed the door I forgot about the tiles I
wanted to install.

I put a piece of tile to test and the sweeper of the door scrapes it a
bit but still operable (not considering the thinset yet) I think I
will have to remove the sweeper. It would be nice to have some kind
of sealing at the bottom of the door, but it's only a garage door.

Is there any way to gain the clearance or minimize the thickness of
tiles installation..? Can a masonary grinding wheel be used to remove
slight amount of material in the door swing area? The area is
covered so there is no standing water.

I do not want to re-hang the door or convert to in-swing door.
Maybe a concrete stain or patio paint with the appropiate patch to
seal the crack is a better solution?

Thanks in advance.


You might need to cut the door at the bottom...hope not.

Pull the sweep off; chances are, if like mine you won't find the sweep
local or they will be hard to find. I just put weatherstrip and new
sweeps on three doors in my house (10 year old...)

If you have clearance, plus calculating thinset - set the tile.

Find a sweep with a "L" shape/channel too screw to the bottom of the
door.

--
Oren

"I didn’t say it was your fault, I said I was blaming you."

Joe July 24th 07 02:20 AM

tile thickness - door scraping
 

wrote:
My garage entry door swings out onto a slab (which is an entry way I
wanted to dress up with tile to hile the concrete crack) There is
only the clearance about the height of aluminum threshold approx.
1/2" . Too bad when I installed the door I forgot about the tiles I
wanted to install.

I put a piece of tile to test and the sweeper of the door scrapes it a
bit but still operable (not considering the thinset yet) I think I
will have to remove the sweeper. It would be nice to have some kind
of sealing at the bottom of the door, but it's only a garage door.

Is there any way to gain the clearance or minimize the thickness of
tiles installation..? Can a masonary grinding wheel be used to remove
slight amount of material in the door swing area? The area is
covered so there is no standing water.

I do not want to re-hang the door or convert to in-swing door.
Maybe a concrete stain or patio paint with the appropiate patch to
seal the crack is a better solution?

Thanks in advance.


Thinking way outside the box, how about some nifty linoleum remnants?
They're very thin, come in 12' wide chunks sometimes, have subdued
patterns in the industrial grades and can be stuck down to concrete
very well. Look around...you may find somethng that will inspire your
wild and crazy creative nature. Good luck.

Joe


[email protected] July 24th 07 06:52 AM

tile thickness - door scraping
 
I am trying to avoid shortening the door as it's an expensive
fiberglass door and my door triming ability isn't very good. I would
have to move up the threshold too and that involves some destruction.

I checked and and beside the sweeper, on the threshold, there is a
horizontal facing trip of rubber to seal the door as well, At this
point I think it's not a big deal to remove the bottom sweeper because
my 2 car garage door has a bigger gap than this door.

So I think I am going to pull off the threshold and test again it
might all just work properly with 1/2" clerance.

On Jul 23, 6:13 pm, Oren wrote:

You might need to cut the door at the bottom...hope not.

Pull the sweep off; chances are, if like mine you won't find the sweep
local or they will be hard to find. I just put weatherstrip and new
sweeps on three doors in my house (10 year old...)

If you have clearance, plus calculating thinset - set the tile.

Find a sweep with a "L" shape/channel too screw to the bottom of the
door.

--
Oren

"I didn't say it was your fault, I said I was blaming you."- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -





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