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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

Hello everyone,


I am hoping that someone here can help me out? I am looking for a
special type of door weatherstripping that I can't seem to find
anywhere.


Many years ago when we use to live in a tenement home that was built in
1905, we had drafts around the doors. We called the landlord, and he
sent the handyman over, who put weatherstripping around the outside of
the door.


It worked really good at stopping the drafts, and we wanted to get some
for the doors of the home that we are in now, but can't seem to find the
same type.


I will explain it the best I can. The type he put on was the type that
you cut to specification to the doors height and width, and then nail or
tack around the outside of the closed door. The weatherstripping was
White in color, and it was sort of like a vinyl spongy foam, with either
a thin piece of wood or metal on the inside of it. It was flat and not
the "kurf", "closed-cell", or "tubular" type which is all I can seem to
find in the stores.


It didn't have anything that went inside the door like the "kurf" kind.
You would just close the door, and nail it into the door frame of the
closed door. Like I said, it was flat, and was made of a "spongy" foam
material inside, and white vinyl outside. If you pushed the "spongy"
foam inward, you could feel that there was either wood or metal ( not
positive which, because we never cut it open to see! ), on the other
side of the weatherstripping for the nails/tacks to go through.


We have gone to Home Depot, Lowes, and the local hardware store, and
have not been able to find the same kind?? All they have is the "kurf"
kind, or the "tubular", "circular-cell", or "all wood" kind. No one
seems to have the flat, spongy foam kind with the thin piece of wood on
the inside.


Does anyone know the kind I am talking about, whats it called, if its
still made, and where I can find it??


Any help would be greatly appreciated!!


Thanks!

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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

On Nov 13, 7:40*pm, (MICHELLE H.) wrote:
Hello everyone,

I am hoping that someone here can help me out? I am looking for a
special type of door weatherstripping that I can't seem to find
anywhere.

Many years ago when we use to live in a tenement home that was built in
1905, we had drafts around the doors. We called the landlord, and he
sent the handyman over, who put weatherstripping around the outside of
the door.

It worked really good at stopping the drafts, and we wanted to get some
for the doors of the home that we are in now, but can't seem to find the
same type.

I will explain it the best I can. The type he put on was the type that
you cut to specification to the doors height and width, and then nail or
tack around the outside of the closed door. The weatherstripping was
White in color, and it was sort of like a vinyl spongy foam, with either
a thin piece of wood or metal on the inside of it. It was flat and not
the "kurf", "closed-cell", or "tubular" type which is all I can seem to
find in the stores.

It didn't have anything that went inside the door like the "kurf" kind.
You would just close the door, and nail it into the door frame of the
closed door. Like I said, it was flat, and was made of a "spongy" foam
material inside, and white vinyl outside. If you pushed the "spongy"
foam inward, you could feel that there was either wood or metal ( not
positive which, because we never cut it open to see! ), on the other
side of the weatherstripping for the nails/tacks to go through.

We have gone to Home Depot, Lowes, and the local hardware store, and
have not been able to find the same kind?? All they have is the "kurf"
kind, or the "tubular", "circular-cell", *or "all wood" kind. *No one
seems to have the flat, spongy foam kind with the thin piece of wood on
the inside.

Does anyone know the kind I am talking about, whats it called, if its
still made, and where I can find it??

Any help would be greatly appreciated!!

Thanks!


Have you searched the interweb to see if you can find a picture of it/
source to buy it from?

I'm not trying to be a wiseguy here, but is it possible that you can't
find it because they don't make it anymore because it wasn't anywhere
near as good as the styles they make today?

Technology has come a long way in the weatherstripping arena.

Why do you need this specific type? The fact that it's hard to find
could indicate that there is a better option.
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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

Here is a pic of the closest thing I can find to it. This is the shape
that it was, but without that thin foam sticking out of the side. It
looked like just the wood part, even though the wood was alot thinner,
and it was wrapped in vinyl and foam.


http://img.diytrade.com/cdimg/64131/..._Foam_Seal.jpg



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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

On Nov 13, 8:45*pm, (MICHELLE H.) wrote:
Here is a pic of the closest thing I can find to it. This is the shape
that it was, but without that thin foam sticking out of the side. It
looked like just the wood part, even though the wood was alot thinner,
and it was wrapped in vinyl and foam.

http://img.diytrade.com/cdimg/64131/...7/Weatherstrip...


Home Depot sells that type of weatherstripping in a couple of
different flavors. Here's one:
Weather-r-strip Portaseal
Model # 2-WS
Store SKU # 533581

They also have something very similar, but it's aluminum with the
flexible stuff.

Zero International has a slew of door seals, many that would fit your
application. They would be more money, and might be tougher to locate
where you are.
http://www.zerointernational.com/cat...e.aspx?page=28

The stuff is all over the internet:
http://www.draftseal.com/productlist.php?prlid=3

You have to understand that the people that work at the big box stores
don't know all of the stuff in their store, many have never installed
the product in question and will commonly be mislead by an _exact and
complete description_! My sympathies. The stuff is in stock in your
Home Depot. Ask for the weatherstripping section, the stuff is
standing upright in a rack on a shelf, and the inventory will be all
mixed up. Keep looking - it'll be there.

R
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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

On Nov 13, 8:49*pm, RicodJour wrote:
On Nov 13, 8:45*pm, (MICHELLE H.) wrote:

Here is a pic of the closest thing I can find to it. This is the shape
that it was, but without that thin foam sticking out of the side. It
looked like just the wood part, even though the wood was alot thinner,
and it was wrapped in vinyl and foam.


http://img.diytrade.com/cdimg/64131/...7/Weatherstrip...


Home Depot sells that type of weatherstripping in a couple of
different flavors. *Here's one:
*Weather-r-strip Portaseal
Model # 2-WS
Store SKU # 533581

They also have something very similar, but it's aluminum with the
flexible stuff.

Zero International has a slew of door seals, many that would fit your
application. *They would be more money, and might be tougher to locate
where you are.http://www.zerointernational.com/cat...e.aspx?page=28

The stuff is all over the internet:http://www.draftseal.com/productlist.php?prlid=3

You have to understand that the people that work at the big box stores
don't know all of the stuff in their store, many have never installed
the product in question and will commonly be mislead by an _exact and
complete description_! *My sympathies. *The stuff is in stock in your
Home Depot. *Ask for the weatherstripping section, the stuff is
standing upright in a rack on a shelf, and the inventory will be all
mixed up. *Keep looking - it'll be there.

R


I wouldn't be so fussy about what kind you use, as long as it is easy
to install and seals against air flow. My guess is that they don't
make what you described any more as better (cheaper) products have
evolved.

Bob Hofmann


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Default Door Frame Weatherstripping Question??

On Nov 13, 10:13*pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote:
On Nov 13, 8:49*pm, RicodJour wrote:
On Nov 13, 8:45*pm, (MICHELLE H.) wrote:


Here is a pic of the closest thing I can find to it. This is the shape
that it was, but without that thin foam sticking out of the side. It
looked like just the wood part, even though the wood was alot thinner,
and it was wrapped in vinyl and foam.


http://img.diytrade.com/cdimg/64131/...7/Weatherstrip....


Home Depot sells that type of weatherstripping in a couple of
different flavors. *Here's one:
*Weather-r-strip Portaseal
Model # 2-WS
Store SKU # 533581


They also have something very similar, but it's aluminum with the
flexible stuff.


Zero International has a slew of door seals, many that would fit your
application. *They would be more money, and might be tougher to locate
where you are.http://www.zerointernational.com/cat...e.aspx?page=28


The stuff is all over the internet:http://www.draftseal.com/productlist..php?prlid=3


You have to understand that the people that work at the big box stores
don't know all of the stuff in their store, many have never installed
the product in question and will commonly be mislead by an _exact and
complete description_! *My sympathies. *The stuff is in stock in your
Home Depot. *Ask for the weatherstripping section, the stuff is
standing upright in a rack on a shelf, and the inventory will be all
mixed up. *Keep looking - it'll be there.



I wouldn't be so fussy about what kind you use, as long as it is easy
to install and seals against air flow. *My guess is that they don't
make what you described any more as better (cheaper) products have
evolved.


Not sure who you're addressing, but since your replied to my post...

There is a big difference in the look and durability of
weatherstripping. If you have never installed the good stuff, the run
of the mill stuff looks just fine. If you're working on a grand front
entrance door, you don't stick on ten buck weatherstripping.

Of course any weatherstripping _should_ seal against drafts and
weather, but this is not always so.

R
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