Ouch! Shattered patio door with stone from lawnmower...
Ouch! Shattered patio door with stone from lawnmower...
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Discussion

Radar Love

Original Poster:

556 posts

257 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
Bugger! I wonder how many others have done this?

I was cutting the grass tonight and mover picked up a stone and threw it a good 40' into the patio doors - result one shattered outer panel, the inner is intact but the whole unit needs replacing urgently.

Visible area is 1700mm x 472mm and the unit is double glazed, toughened and ~20mm thick.

The insurance covers it but with a £200 excess and loss of 10% no claims discount.

Any idea of the cost to replace? If there's any chance of getting it done under £250 then not much sense in making a claim.

Arse!

R60EST

2,364 posts

206 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
The glass cost (trade) is only about £60. If it's into a upvc or aluminium frame it should take someone who knows what they are doing less than 15 mins to fit. Try a local D/G firm before going down the insurance route

Radar Love

Original Poster:

556 posts

257 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
Thanks. It's a hardwood frame so a bit more skill to fit I imagine, do you know how long to turn make the panel?

fatboy b

9,663 posts

240 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
I did this a few years back with our old wooden patio doors. Glass was about £60 as already stated and took me a couple of hours. Had to carefully prise out the 1/4 dowels, remove old glass and clean up, put putty in, glass in with packers round the outside to position glass correctly, putty in the corners, and refit the dowels.

R60EST

2,364 posts

206 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
Hardwood is slightly more labour intensive . If you're lucky the old unit is barely stuck in with anything and the glazing beads come away clean with no breakage

If you're unlucky removing the old unit if it's well stuck with putty can be difficult to do without damaging the rebate . The glazing beads can be prone to snapping on removal so a trip to the local timber merchant to get new ones is necessary, either from stock or worse still custom made. Then there's filling the pins and staining to match , all a pain in the ar5e.

Unit manufacture time should be 2 days maximum if the company has their own toughening plant , or about a week if they send it off / buy in

It is a quite easy , if time consuming DIY job

stargazer30

1,704 posts

190 months

Monday 13th June 2011
quotequote all
Yup have done this, our lawn mover took out one of the conservatory safety glass windows, pretty impressive. £150 to fix!

coach

1,115 posts

276 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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Yep, did this the other day. Still waiting on the panel to be made...
They had to come and film the window over in case the glass fell out!

Simpo Two

91,570 posts

289 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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coach said:
They had to come and film the window over in case the glass fell out!
A roll of masking tape was good enough to keep the Luftwaffe out!

coach

1,115 posts

276 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
A roll of masking tape was good enough to keep the Luftwaffe out!
Hehe, I just park the Blackpool bomber in the drive for that! biggrin

Evo141n

274 posts

184 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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Had this done 2 days ago £123 all in inc fitting.

J-Tuner

2,855 posts

267 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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I had the exact same thing but on my front door side panel glass. The door frame/hinges and lock was shagged anyway so it was false economy replacing it. So got a new one going in this week - £1200 down lol frown

Radar Love

Original Poster:

556 posts

257 months

Thursday 23rd June 2011
quotequote all
Panel replaced for £165 and a very good job was done too!

Thanks for the advice, insurance premium intact and cost less than the excess.

blueg33

45,141 posts

248 months

Thursday 23rd June 2011
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I did it a couple of years ago. Most annoying, the Mrs blamed me for incorrect operation of the mower! Accidental damage insurance paid for the repaid £300 ish (big patio door)