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-   -   Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma! (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/3425-wooden-vs-upvc-door-dilemma.html)

Simon November 10th 03 08:56 AM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
Hi,

We live in an Edwardian semi about 100yds from the sea (plenty of
wind, salt, etc..). The front door is currently a very old aluminium
double glazed door with 2 main glass panels (an somewhat un-attractive
yellow) that is continuously cold to the touch - and very very ugly.
We have just replaced the double glazing (uPVC) and now want to tackle
the front door.

I cannot decide between wooden or uPVC door:
Wooden doors are far more attractive, good range of doors (new or
salvage) to choose from, can be repainted on a whim, accept different
door furniture easily,
uPVC doors are generally white only, limited range, have a high
threshold, are draughtproof, never need maintenance.

Which is the most secure? I have read enough posts here to know that
this answer is a heated topic of discussion.

A chippie who lives next door says he would not put in a wooden door
(turning down potential business!) because of where we live.

Any suggestions?

TIA,

Simon.

oldmolly November 10th 03 09:54 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 

"Simon" wrote in message
om...
Hi,

We live in an Edwardian semi about 100yds from the sea (plenty of
wind, salt, etc..). The front door is currently a very old aluminium
double glazed door with 2 main glass panels (an somewhat un-attractive
yellow) that is continuously cold to the touch - and very very ugly.
We have just replaced the double glazing (uPVC) and now want to tackle
the front door.

I cannot decide between wooden or uPVC door:
Wooden doors are far more attractive, good range of doors (new or
salvage) to choose from, can be repainted on a whim, accept different
door furniture easily,
uPVC doors are generally white only, limited range, have a high
threshold, are draughtproof, never need maintenance.

Which is the most secure? I have read enough posts here to know that
this answer is a heated topic of discussion.

A chippie who lives next door says he would not put in a wooden door
(turning down potential business!) because of where we live.

Any suggestions?

If you have put in upvc windows, do the same with your door. For the sae
reasons you did the windows will apply to the door. Having white upvc
windows, and a coloured front door looks odd to me.



John November 10th 03 10:42 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
Are there any UPVC doors that don't have the high threshold? It puts me off.
It is a trip hazard and the rubber seal gets damaged.
Surely there is an alternative design

--


Regards

John


"oldmolly" wrote in message
...

"Simon" wrote in message
om...
Hi,

We live in an Edwardian semi about 100yds from the sea (plenty of
wind, salt, etc..). The front door is currently a very old aluminium
double glazed door with 2 main glass panels (an somewhat un-attractive
yellow) that is continuously cold to the touch - and very very ugly.
We have just replaced the double glazing (uPVC) and now want to tackle
the front door.

I cannot decide between wooden or uPVC door:
Wooden doors are far more attractive, good range of doors (new or
salvage) to choose from, can be repainted on a whim, accept different
door furniture easily,
uPVC doors are generally white only, limited range, have a high
threshold, are draughtproof, never need maintenance.

Which is the most secure? I have read enough posts here to know that
this answer is a heated topic of discussion.

A chippie who lives next door says he would not put in a wooden door
(turning down potential business!) because of where we live.

Any suggestions?

If you have put in upvc windows, do the same with your door. For the sae
reasons you did the windows will apply to the door. Having white upvc
windows, and a coloured front door looks odd to me.




---
All of my outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.537 / Virus Database: 332 - Release Date: 06/11/2003



John Laird November 10th 03 11:28 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 22:42:35 -0000, "John"
john.plant90@NO-SPAMntlworldDOTcom wrote:

Are there any UPVC doors that don't have the high threshold? It puts me off.
It is a trip hazard and the rubber seal gets damaged.
Surely there is an alternative design


Good point. How do these square with the increasing regulations on disabled
access ?

--
Every time I have all the answers, they change questions!

Mail john rather than nospam...

Lee Blaver November 10th 03 11:32 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
John Laird wrote:
On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 22:42:35 -0000, "John"
john.plant90@NO-SPAMntlworldDOTcom wrote:


Are there any UPVC doors that don't have the high threshold? It puts me off.
It is a trip hazard and the rubber seal gets damaged.
Surely there is an alternative design



Good point. How do these square with the increasing regulations on disabled
access ?


B&Q have low threshold frames available (at extra cost), in their
"fitted" range. So others must also offer it...

Lee

--
To reply use lee.blaver and ntlworld.com


dg November 11th 03 01:52 AM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
You could knock a course of bricks off and sink the cill into the floor

dg


"John" john.plant90@NO-SPAMntlworldDOTcom wrote in message
...
Are there any UPVC doors that don't have the high threshold? It puts me

off.
It is a trip hazard and the rubber seal gets damaged.
Surely there is an alternative design

--


Regards

John


"oldmolly" wrote in message
...

"Simon" wrote in message
om...
Hi,

We live in an Edwardian semi about 100yds from the sea (plenty of
wind, salt, etc..). The front door is currently a very old aluminium
double glazed door with 2 main glass panels (an somewhat un-attractive
yellow) that is continuously cold to the touch - and very very ugly.
We have just replaced the double glazing (uPVC) and now want to tackle
the front door.

I cannot decide between wooden or uPVC door:
Wooden doors are far more attractive, good range of doors (new or
salvage) to choose from, can be repainted on a whim, accept different
door furniture easily,
uPVC doors are generally white only, limited range, have a high
threshold, are draughtproof, never need maintenance.

Which is the most secure? I have read enough posts here to know that
this answer is a heated topic of discussion.

A chippie who lives next door says he would not put in a wooden door
(turning down potential business!) because of where we live.

Any suggestions?

If you have put in upvc windows, do the same with your door. For the

sae
reasons you did the windows will apply to the door. Having white upvc
windows, and a coloured front door looks odd to me.




---
All of my outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.537 / Virus Database: 332 - Release Date: 06/11/2003




dg November 11th 03 02:00 AM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
Plastic doors are crap. They look awful and the threshold is a pain.

Put in a proper HW door and frame, and if security is a problem, then you
can fit a multipoint lock to the door and rebate a steel strip into the
closing jamb of the frame (prevents it spliting if forced).

Statisticly, most break ins are not via the front door, and unless a glazed
or ply panelled door, the weakest point is the frame.

You can get composite doors that are the same as normal doors, but faced
with PVCu plastic. These are best of both worlds

dg


"Simon" wrote in message
om...
Hi,

We live in an Edwardian semi about 100yds from the sea (plenty of
wind, salt, etc..). The front door is currently a very old aluminium
double glazed door with 2 main glass panels (an somewhat un-attractive
yellow) that is continuously cold to the touch - and very very ugly.
We have just replaced the double glazing (uPVC) and now want to tackle
the front door.

I cannot decide between wooden or uPVC door:
Wooden doors are far more attractive, good range of doors (new or
salvage) to choose from, can be repainted on a whim, accept different
door furniture easily,
uPVC doors are generally white only, limited range, have a high
threshold, are draughtproof, never need maintenance.

Which is the most secure? I have read enough posts here to know that
this answer is a heated topic of discussion.

A chippie who lives next door says he would not put in a wooden door
(turning down potential business!) because of where we live.

Any suggestions?

TIA,

Simon.



Brian S Gray November 11th 03 11:45 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 22:42:35 -0000, "John"
john.plant90@NO-SPAMntlworldDOTcom wrote:

Are there any UPVC doors that don't have the high threshold? It puts me off.
It is a trip hazard and the rubber seal gets damaged.
Surely there is an alternative design

You can get UPVc doors with a low threshold but they are not
recommended in windy situations.
You do not have to have a gloss white UPVc door. I quite like the
woodgrain white finish provided by Rock Doors which we have used at
the back of our house (with a low threshold).

Andrew Gabriel November 11th 03 11:59 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
In article ,
"dg" writes:
You could knock a course of bricks off and sink the cill into the floor


You would have a problem with the bottom of the door being
below floor level...

--
Andrew Gabriel

dg November 12th 03 02:20 AM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
No. The bottom of the door stays at floor level - it is the cill and
threshold section of the door frame that are below floor level.

This arrangement is vey useful for patio doors.

dg


"Andrew Gabriel" wrote in message
...
In article ,
"dg" writes:
You could knock a course of bricks off and sink the cill into the floor


You would have a problem with the bottom of the door being
below floor level...

--
Andrew Gabriel



bob November 12th 03 08:42 PM

Wooden vs uPVC door dilemma!
 
"dg" wrote in message ...
Plastic doors are crap. They look awful and the threshold is a pain.

There is no such thing as a uPVC door, they are windows with a low
sill and a letterbox. Stick to wood, although with what they cost you
wouldent think that they grow on trees!.
B


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