JT

04/02/2004 1:27 AM

DOOR UPDATE

Awhile back I posted on making a plastic strip door for my shop. To
let some light in, while keeping heat in. Well, it's up. It works.

Wound up using the window covering plastic. It's 36" wide, but
folded in half. So cut them at the fold.

Had originally thought about using the double thickness. Then
thought of something simpler. Then thought of a simpler way. This
went on a time or two more. The doorway is 52" wide by 72" tall. Took
a couple of narrow strips of plywood, 17" each, butt joined them, with a
lap block, all glued. Measured around it, with a piece of plastic, so I
could add that to the 72". Turned out, I wound up with about 2" more
than I needed, or wanted. Better than too short, but that's what duck
tape is for (yes, I know, but I have duck tape, not duct tape). Wound
up taking 5 sheets of the single thickness, over lapped 9" each, except
for the end pieces.

It actually works. Have a bit of static cling problem, that I hope
will go away after a bit. May have to tack the end pieces to the door
frame. I think I will have to have some weight on the bottoms, but as
they need to be trimmed about 2" anyway, I figure just wrap a weight,
probabl a piece of wood, in each, and duck tape them. No prob. With
the static cling, they need a bit of adjusting when you go in and out,
but not bad. I used 3 scews to hold it up, so I can take it down
later, with no trouble. But, I'm thinking this may work well in the
summer too, to keep the skeeters out, or a lot of them anyway.

Much better than closing the doors and turning the heater on. It
works as well as that, and I have a lot more light, with the plastic.
Plus the shop dog doesn't seem to care for it, which I think will be a
definite plus. She as the habit of coming up behind me, and touching my
hand with her nose. Startles the Hell out of me, every time. She
wasn't around earlier today, then came up behind me in front of the shop
and did that. Didn't hear her coming at all. Very bad on the nerves.

But, the door works as planned, and hoped, with no out of pocket
funds. I still have enough of the plastic left for dozens of pattersn -
which is what I originally got it for.

It's always nice when something works like it is designed to.

JOAT
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts.
- Pete Maccarrone

Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 3 Feb 2004.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/


This topic has 4 replies

SS

"Sweet Sawdust"

in reply to [email protected] (T.) on 04/02/2004 1:27 AM

04/02/2004 8:08 AM

Glad to hear/read that it worked, I had serious doubts about it when you
first posted your idea. Keep us posted on the durability of the door and how
well it holds up over time, Might be a plan you want to post in the future.
"T." <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Awhile back I posted on making a plastic strip door for my shop. To
> let some light in, while keeping heat in. Well, it's up. It works.
>
> Wound up using the window covering plastic. It's 36" wide, but
> folded in half. So cut them at the fold.
>
> Had originally thought about using the double thickness. Then
> thought of something simpler. Then thought of a simpler way. This
> went on a time or two more. The doorway is 52" wide by 72" tall. Took
> a couple of narrow strips of plywood, 17" each, butt joined them, with a
> lap block, all glued. Measured around it, with a piece of plastic, so I
> could add that to the 72". Turned out, I wound up with about 2" more
> than I needed, or wanted. Better than too short, but that's what duck
> tape is for (yes, I know, but I have duck tape, not duct tape). Wound
> up taking 5 sheets of the single thickness, over lapped 9" each, except
> for the end pieces.
>
> It actually works. Have a bit of static cling problem, that I hope
> will go away after a bit. May have to tack the end pieces to the door
> frame. I think I will have to have some weight on the bottoms, but as
> they need to be trimmed about 2" anyway, I figure just wrap a weight,
> probabl a piece of wood, in each, and duck tape them. No prob. With
> the static cling, they need a bit of adjusting when you go in and out,
> but not bad. I used 3 scews to hold it up, so I can take it down
> later, with no trouble. But, I'm thinking this may work well in the
> summer too, to keep the skeeters out, or a lot of them anyway.
>
> Much better than closing the doors and turning the heater on. It
> works as well as that, and I have a lot more light, with the plastic.
> Plus the shop dog doesn't seem to care for it, which I think will be a
> definite plus. She as the habit of coming up behind me, and touching my
> hand with her nose. Startles the Hell out of me, every time. She
> wasn't around earlier today, then came up behind me in front of the shop
> and did that. Didn't hear her coming at all. Very bad on the nerves.
>
> But, the door works as planned, and hoped, with no out of pocket
> funds. I still have enough of the plastic left for dozens of pattersn -
> which is what I originally got it for.
>
> It's always nice when something works like it is designed to.
>
> JOAT
> It's what you learn after you know it all that counts.
> - Pete Maccarrone
>
> Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
> Web Page Update 3 Feb 2004.
> Some tunes I like.
> http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/
>

JT

in reply to "Sweet Sawdust" on 04/02/2004 8:08 AM

04/02/2004 10:17 PM

Wed, Feb 4, 2004, 8:08am (EST-1) [email protected]
(Sweet=A0Sawdust) claims:
<snip> I had serious doubts about it when you first posted your idea.

Doubts? Doubts? You actually doubted me? I feel crushed.

Keep us posted on the durability of the door and how well it holds up
over time,

Being as I'm not going to be going in and out thru it all day, and
the fact that when the doors are shut, it'll be "sheltered", I'm
thinking it's going to last for several years, anyway. I definitely
don't think it's something I'm going to have to repeat, every 6 months,
or a year. And, when it finally does redoing, it's simple, and won't
take long.

Might be a plan you want to post in the future.

Plan? Plan? We don' need no steenkin' plan. Uh, there is no
plan. Me telling how I did it, in the original post, is all the "plan"
there is, or ever will be. But, I'm perfectly willing to share, so you
can make as many as you want, for yourself, friends, or sale.

JOAT
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts.
- Pete Maccarrone

Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 4 Feb 2004.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/

sw

"slowalker"

in reply to [email protected] (T.) on 04/02/2004 1:27 AM

04/02/2004 4:32 PM

Wipe the plastic with a dryer anti-cling sheet. Should help.

JT

in reply to "slowalker" on 04/02/2004 4:32 PM

04/02/2004 10:19 PM

Wed, Feb 4, 2004, 4:32pm (EST+5) [email protected] (slowalker)
says:
Wipe the plastic with a dryer anti-cling sheet. Should help.

First, I'm going to see if it resolves on its own, and if it does,
how long it takes. If it doesn't, then I may wipe it down.

JOAT
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts.
- Pete Maccarrone

Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 4 Feb 2004.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/


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