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Default Sliding glass door track height

In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing the patio
and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami during the
hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and flowing downward
it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I know the
part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that clips on to the
original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use the same part to build
up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make it less likely for water to
get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose to wash
the doors there are some water coming in.

Thanks,

MC


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Default Sliding glass door track height

MiamiCuse wrote:

In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing the patio
and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami during the
hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and flowing downward
it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I know the
part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that clips on to the
original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use the same part to build
up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make it less likely for water to
get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose to wash
the doors there are some water coming in.

Thanks,

MC




Hurricane shutters, plastic sheet and sandbags.
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Default Sliding glass door track height

MiamiCuse wrote:
In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing
the patio and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami
during the hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and
flowing downward it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I
know the part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that
clips on to the original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use
the same part to build up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make
it less likely for water to get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose
to wash the doors there are some water coming in.


Can't you provide drainage for the track?


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Default Sliding glass door track height

On Mon, 12 May 2008 01:23:03 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:

In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing the patio
and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami during the
hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and flowing downward
it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I know the
part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that clips on to the
original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use the same part to build
up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make it less likely for water to
get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose to wash
the doors there are some water coming in.



Wait until it rains and see if there is a leak. You may not have a
problem at all. With a hose I have done the same thing, water inside.

Make sure the weep holes on the track are clear of debris.


Thanks,

MC

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Default Sliding glass door track height

Oren wrote:

On Mon, 12 May 2008 01:23:03 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:



In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing the patio
and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami during the
hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and flowing downward
it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I know the
part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that clips on to the
original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use the same part to build
up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make it less likely for water to
get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose to wash
the doors there are some water coming in.




Wait until it rains and see if there is a leak. You may not have a
problem at all. With a hose I have done the same thing, water inside.

Make sure the weep holes on the track are clear of debris.




Hurricanes aren't "rain"; they are water blowing hard enough
horizontally to penetrate concrete block and
stucco walls. We have hurricane shutters and would not be without
them. We did plywood one year. It
is not something we could or would repeat. With h'cane shutters, there
is nothing blowing against the door
to work in through seals. So, now, we keep the water form coming under
the door by piling sandbags
on top of plastic sheets. Last h'cane season, I tried to get hubby to
do the sandbags and plastic, but he
wasn't game. He didn't leave for mandatory evac, either. Not long
afterward, during one of the bad
floods up NE, I saw what plastic sheets and sandbags can do. A whole
neighborhod was under water
by several feet, but for one home. The guy wrapped plastic sheets
around his house and held them with
sandbags. No water in the house.


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Default Sliding glass door track height

On Mon, 12 May 2008 17:55:06 -0400, Norminn
wrote:

Oren wrote:

On Mon, 12 May 2008 01:23:03 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:



In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing the patio
and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami during the
hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and flowing downward
it will fill up the door track and water may intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I know the
part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal that clips on to the
original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can I use the same part to build
up the interior fin and caulk to edges to make it less likely for water to
get in when it's raining like that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose to wash
the doors there are some water coming in.




Wait until it rains and see if there is a leak. You may not have a
problem at all. With a hose I have done the same thing, water inside.

Make sure the weep holes on the track are clear of debris.




Hurricanes aren't "rain"; they are water blowing hard enough
horizontally to penetrate concrete block and
stucco walls. We have hurricane shutters and would not be without
them. We did plywood one year. It
is not something we could or would repeat. With h'cane shutters, there
is nothing blowing against the door
to work in through seals. So, now, we keep the water form coming under
the door by piling sandbags
on top of plastic sheets. Last h'cane season, I tried to get hubby to
do the sandbags and plastic, but he
wasn't game. He didn't leave for mandatory evac, either. Not long
afterward, during one of the bad
floods up NE, I saw what plastic sheets and sandbags can do. A whole
neighborhod was under water
by several feet, but for one home. The guy wrapped plastic sheets
around his house and held them with
sandbags. No water in the house.


After hurricane Donna, ca. 1960, we had much of the Caloosahatchee
River (Lee Co, FL) thrown onto the local homes. At the end, we had 35
people huddled up in the home. The water level was just below the door
threshold.

It was a day my brother recovered two of the elders, carried them both
to our home, gave them safety. Their home was in a canal behind the
home.

I know Hurricanes! Go Miami!

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Default Sliding glass door track height

Oren wrote in
:

On Mon, 12 May 2008 17:55:06 -0400, Norminn
wrote:

Oren wrote:

On Mon, 12 May 2008 01:23:03 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:



In one of my rooms I have three sets of sliding glass doors facing
the patio and I am worried that in driving rain down here in Miami
during the hurricane season with rain blasting on the glass door and
flowing downward it will fill up the door track and water may
intrude.

I am thinking of building up the inside "fin" of these tracks. I
know the part that the roller sits on they sell a strip of metal
that clips on to the original part to reinforce a damaged fin. Can
I use the same part to build up the interior fin and caulk to edges
to make it less likely for water to get in when it's raining like
that?

It has not happened yet with real rain but when I use a garden hose
to wash the doors there are some water coming in.




Wait until it rains and see if there is a leak. You may not have a
problem at all. With a hose I have done the same thing, water inside.

Make sure the weep holes on the track are clear of debris.




Hurricanes aren't "rain"; they are water blowing hard enough
horizontally to penetrate concrete block and
stucco walls. We have hurricane shutters and would not be without
them. We did plywood one year. It
is not something we could or would repeat. With h'cane shutters,
there is nothing blowing against the door
to work in through seals. So, now, we keep the water form coming
under the door by piling sandbags
on top of plastic sheets. Last h'cane season, I tried to get hubby to
do the sandbags and plastic, but he
wasn't game. He didn't leave for mandatory evac, either. Not long
afterward, during one of the bad
floods up NE, I saw what plastic sheets and sandbags can do. A whole
neighborhod was under water
by several feet, but for one home. The guy wrapped plastic sheets
around his house and held them with
sandbags. No water in the house.


After hurricane Donna, ca. 1960, we had much of the Caloosahatchee
River (Lee Co, FL) thrown onto the local homes. At the end, we had 35
people huddled up in the home. The water level was just below the door
threshold.

It was a day my brother recovered two of the elders, carried them both
to our home, gave them safety. Their home was in a canal behind the
home.

I know Hurricanes! Go Miami!


Although only a kid of single digit I do remember Donna. Lived on the CT
coast of Long Island sound. Brother and I were in the yard rowing around
in a wooden rowboat.

"To the stump!"
"Aye Aye Captain!"
"Put yer back into it ya little dweeb."
"**** you captain."
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