AS

Andrew Sarangan

11/08/2008 7:53 AM

Cut window in garage door

Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
door appears to be the best location.

I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).

Any suggestions?



This topic has 12 replies

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

12/08/2008 10:08 AM


"Robatoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:98041e78-de9a-459f-afe3-200ac8b235eb@v57g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
On Aug 11, 10:53 am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.
>
> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> Any suggestions?

I would suggest a circular hole, or two smaller ones some distance
apart.
Circular openings retain much more strength and have no stress risers
in the corners.
If you keep them lower, towards the bottom of the door, the structural
concerns lessen somewhat.
Look for a round device to move your air.

**********************************************************************************

I would suggest a little investigation into the amount of fresh air
required. Too small a vent will offer no advantage over just using inside
air.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

Br

BobK207

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 8:42 AM

On Aug 11, 7:53=A0am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.
>
> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> Any suggestions?

Yes, it is "possible" BUT depends on the details.......

Based on your brief description sounds like a steel sectional door
with foam filler.

Also depends on the size of the intake grill relative to the section
height.

All the material you remove is doing a job; strength & stiffness.
You've got the replace the capacity you remove.

Like drilling holes in or notching beams ........ it is doable but you
gotta be careful.

I might attempt it but I would discuss it (& get it eye balled) with
at least one or two technically competent associates.

Why not just pop the door open an inch or two?

cheers
Bob


AS

Andrew Sarangan

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 10:12 AM

On Aug 11, 11:42 am, BobK207 <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Aug 11, 7:53 am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> > install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> > door appears to be the best location.
>
> > I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> > appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> > skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> > Any suggestions?
>
> Yes, it is "possible" BUT depends on the details.......
>
> Based on your brief description sounds like a steel sectional door
> with foam filler.
>
> Also depends on the size of the intake grill relative to the section
> height.
>
> All the material you remove is doing a job; strength & stiffness.
> You've got the replace the capacity you remove.
>
> Like drilling holes in or notching beams ........ it is doable but you
> gotta be careful.
>
> I might attempt it but I would discuss it (& get it eye balled) with
> at least one or two technically competent associates.
>
> Why not just pop the door open an inch or two?
>
> cheers
> Bob

The doors panels are 18" high and each panel spans the whole 16'
width. My thought was to cut out a 10"x10" square, which should be
small enough to not compromise the panel strength.

So far I have been popping opening the door by about an inch, but I
need a proper vent with a mesh to filter out debris and insects.

RC

Robatoy

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 1:51 PM

On Aug 11, 10:53=A0am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.
>
> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> Any suggestions?

I would suggest a circular hole, or two smaller ones some distance
apart.
Circular openings retain much more strength and have no stress risers
in the corners.
If you keep them lower, towards the bottom of the door, the structural
concerns lessen somewhat.
Look for a round device to move your air.

aa

aemeijers

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

12/08/2008 2:06 AM

Big_Jake wrote:
> On Aug 11, 9:53 am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
>> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
>> door appears to be the best location.
>>
>> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
>> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
>> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>>
>> Any suggestions?
>
> We added several windows to a door that is similar in construction to
> yours. I used a cut off wheel on a 4" grinder to do most of the
> cutting, and finished off with a sawzall. Drilling 4 holes at the
> corners will really help to "keep you honest'.
>
> JK
A real garage door dealer, one that handles commercial doors, will have
purpose-built bubble windows and vent ports designed for a door like
that. The ones I have seen were a 2-piece self-edging setup, round or
rounded on the corners, and had gaskets to keep water from getting into
the insulation layer. As to cutting the hole- careful mapping, and a
couple through-holes for reference points. Jigsaw and a metal blade
(unless you have electric nibblers) to make the holes in the skin, and
fill any voids with stiff foam. You want the edges of the hole to be
solid. Make the holes centered between the hinges, and centered on the
height of the panel, unless you detect an internal rib there or something.

--
aem sends....

SE

"Special Ed"

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 11:09 AM

"Andrew Sarangan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:5dab6a46-9597-40a0-94b5-aa9b536d8439@s50g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.
>
> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> Any suggestions?

Only thing is to make sure your health insurance, auto insurance and
personal liability insurance policies are up to date and have high enough
coverage limits before you start cutting into garage door panels that will
rise above your head, your families heads and your car...

BI

Big_Jake

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 4:19 PM

On Aug 11, 9:53 am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.
>
> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>
> Any suggestions?

We added several windows to a door that is similar in construction to
yours. I used a cut off wheel on a 4" grinder to do most of the
cutting, and finished off with a sawzall. Drilling 4 holes at the
corners will really help to "keep you honest'.

JK

TT

"Tekkie®"

in reply to Big_Jake on 11/08/2008 4:19 PM

22/05/2017 7:54 PM


On 22-May-2017, Silvio Manuel
<[email protected]> wrote:

> replying to Big_Jake, Silvio Manuel wrote:
> Did you use garage door windows, make your own or retrofit some other kind
> of
> window? I'm hoping to repurpose windows for use in a garage door.

How do you keep the glass from breaking?

SM

Silvio Manuel

in reply to Big_Jake on 11/08/2008 4:19 PM

22/05/2017 5:14 AM

replying to Big_Jake, Silvio Manuel wrote:
Did you use garage door windows, make your own or retrofit some other kind of
window? I'm hoping to repurpose windows for use in a garage door.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/maintenance/cut-window-in-garage-door-324501-.htm

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 4:43 PM

Andrew Sarangan wrote:
> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
> door appears to be the best location.

I've seen it done in hangar and garage doors with a fine toothed blade
in a Sawzall. The best example involved plywood, bolted through the
waste section, with the whole sandwich cut as a unit.

Ss

Shelly

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

19/08/2008 7:54 PM

On Tue, 12 Aug 2008 02:06:49 GMT, aemeijers <[email protected]> wrote:

>Big_Jake wrote:
>> On Aug 11, 9:53 am, Andrew Sarangan <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Is it possible to cut out a window on a regular garage door? I need to
>>> install a fresh-air intake grille for an exhaust fan, and the garage
>>> door appears to be the best location.
>>>
>>> I am not sure what the construction material is, but the outer skins
>>> appear to be somewhat flexible, so I am thinking it is a thin steel
>>> skin with an open cavity inside (or foam).
>>>
>>> Any suggestions?
>>
>> We added several windows to a door that is similar in construction to
>> yours. I used a cut off wheel on a 4" grinder to do most of the
>> cutting, and finished off with a sawzall. Drilling 4 holes at the
>> corners will really help to "keep you honest'.
>>
>> JK
>A real garage door dealer, one that handles commercial doors, will have
>purpose-built bubble windows and vent ports designed for a door like
>that. The ones I have seen were a 2-piece self-edging setup, round or
>rounded on the corners, and had gaskets to keep water from getting into
>the insulation layer. As to cutting the hole- careful mapping, and a
>couple through-holes for reference points. Jigsaw and a metal blade
>(unless you have electric nibblers) to make the holes in the skin, and
>fill any voids with stiff foam. You want the edges of the hole to be
>solid. Make the holes centered between the hinges, and centered on the
>height of the panel, unless you detect an internal rib there or something.
If y'all have a garage door opener attached, remember to re balance
the door when finished with the door mod.
hth

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to Andrew Sarangan on 11/08/2008 7:53 AM

11/08/2008 1:35 PM


"Andrew Sarangan" wrote

> So far I have been popping opening the door by about an inch, but I
> need a proper vent with a mesh to filter out debris and insects.

http://www.garagedoorsupply.com/vent.html


--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 5/14/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)


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