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Anybody made their own garage door(s)?
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loply:
Hi folks,

I'm in the middle of getting a new garage built, and I'm trying to decide what to do for the garage doors.

The opening is 3.2m in total and ideally I want side-hinged timber doors (or at least that appearance). I might make one a folding one, and the other a normal one.

Don't like roller doors because if you need to open them to let fumes out or to get to/from the car you have to open them all the way, lets the dust blow in and everybody can see in.

Commercially available timber doors cost an absolute fortune (one place quoted me £4k!) and don't look very secure - a big prybar or a chordless jigsaw and they will come right open.

Thinking about welding up a steel frame and affixing a timber facia to the front therefore, hopefully it will be secure, not warp, etc, just wondering if anybody else has done something similar?

Cheers,
Rich
DavidA:
I would use 2" x 2" x 1/4"  black angle iron. and weld up two rectangular frames. Cross-braced.

Cover the frames with 1/2" ply and then add a sheet steel cladding.  Make sure you turn over the edges so no one can get a lever behind and pry it off.

Ensure that the doors are sunk into the garage frame ( flush with the edges so no access for a crow bar. Big chunky hinges completely concealed.

Use dome headed coach bolts to fix the cladding/ply to the angle frame.  Maybe even tack the bolt heads to the steel sheet.

Worked well for me .

Dave.
PekkaNF:
If you are planning something like this it is megabucks, no matter what:
http://www.woodritedoors.co.uk/making-of-a-timber-garage-door



My father build three sets of double doors. That big doors are pretty heavy and offer good resistance to any hinge. He made hinges himself. They are classical pin and leaf type, pin is about 25 mm. Hard to bolt on, because they need some serious wood to back up.

Normal door frame would twist under this load. Also the door itself was build torsionaly rigid. He put urethane (or styroxfoam) hard insulation inside and screwed 12 mm (or so) Plywood on inside. Weather resistant plywood outside. That keeps the doors straight. They are heavy as hell. Rest of hardware was standard.

We have snow all winter. Absolute proverbial to clean all out from the concrete slab on front. Those doors have a big swing and it's a good workout to showel 30 cm on wet snow out of it when it snows on the evening and you don't want it to freeze over night.

Plan it carefully. If you are planning to use normal hinges, you need probably three or four of them. Don't be afraid to put hinge pin outside, you can put pins on door frame and bushings to door rail (these need to be angled). Anyways it might get your attention if someone needs a good angle grinder or such to saw trough your welded 1" pin and there is several of them!
http://www.roca.fi/lukitus-turvallisuus/shared/UL/products/905392-2.gif
http://www.rocaindustry.com/ovet-ikkunat/Product/Murtosuojatappi-|-SLUG-10/125/Full|1319/
http://www.rocaindustry.com/ovet-ikkunat/Product/Murtosuojatappi-|-MS1/125/Full|1148/
Hope they show in English, click union jack if not.

Could not find any good guide, much of them are like:
http://www.triangletactical.net/2012/11/19/opsec-10-tips-for-not-becoming-a-home-invasion-target-during-the-holiday-travel-season-part-2/


Pekka
loply:
Yes I think I will put the hinges on the outside, probably 4 per door, they make security hinges with those little pins in which mean the doors can't be removed even if the hinge is ground off. I will have bolts through the door to the concrete and lintel anyway.

I think I will make the traditional garage door frame with Z shapes on the inside, but from steel, then I will use exterior grade timber to make what appears to be the frame of a traditional door around the outsides, but infill it with plywood if that makes sense.

The hinges will be screwed to the steel frame via threaded countersunk fasteners, so not going into the wood at all.

One thing I would like to do - not sure if I will get round to it or not - is have all the bolts electronic ones with either an electronic traditional key which retracts them, or maybe some kind of Arduino/Raspberry Pi RFID or numeric keypad system... This way you can have lots of bolts but not the inconvenience of undoing them one by one!
Kjelle:
Loply, Pekkas idea is very good... And if you go the electronic route with the bolts, remember that default for commercial electric locks is no voltage, no locking (good idea if you lock and unlock the emergency exits with a button)... Now, I don't think that is a good idea for you... But do think of how you open those big doors if you loose electricity!

Kjelle
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