02-28-2020, 01:25 PM
(02-28-2020, 12:29 PM)Cooler Wrote: How did you specify the shape to them? It seems like you would have to show a drawing.
My house, built in 1953 has a legal door (a 5" x 5" window in regular glass-which is small enough to be exempt) but the side light is floor to ceiling and in fluted glass and I am certain that is not tempered, and I am fairly certain it is not to the modern code.
Can you tell us where you got the tempered glass?
Thanks. Nice job. It has to impress those that visit.
I don't know when the codes requiring safety glass in doors and sidelites, and some windows, came into effect, but all doors sold now must use some type of safety glass, either tempered or laminated. I think units installed prior to the code change get grandfathered if there's an accident and someone sues you, but I don't know if that would apply to a new lite replacing one that gets broken.
I ordered the glass from One Day Glass. Their website is pretty good and allows you to order glass of pretty much any shape. The glass I bought fit their parallelogram shape, but I still included drawings of all the pieces. Their order form allows you to attach files and that's how I transferred the drawings to them. When buying patterned glass it's critical to remember that the two sides have a different texture, so you need to order book matched parts for any shape like my parallelograms. So I had drawings for the parts on both the inside and outside of the door. One Day's website makes it hard to find the patterned glass they offer; it's buried under "Glass Tints", and they don't offer as many patterns as some of the commercial guys, or what my local glass shop could source, but we liked the Seedy Reamy so it worked out.
In the past I bought glass from a couple of companies in Ohio and Michigan, but they only do commercial sales now, and One Day Glass was about the only company I could find serving individual consumers needing tempered patterned glass. I have a couple of glass shops locally, too, and I asked one of them to quote on the parts. They were 20% higher even after the shipping was included from One Day Glass, so I went with them. The glass cost $430, including shipping. That's a rather astounding price in my mind. Before I realized I needed book matched parts the price was only going to be $240. Seemed like price gouging just to cut the glass in a mirror image, but that's what I needed. I was really nervous about it getting broken in transit but it arrived in perfect condition via Fedex Ground with many transfers along the way.
John