02-05-2017, 10:01 AM
I saw "astragal" in another thread, and said, "oh, that's what it's called." I have an exterior double door in my shop that has a pretty big gap between the doors. The only astragals carried locally are wood, and not made for weatherstripping. I was thinking about making a flat piece with weather stripping on the non-active side (inside). Looks like the metal ones that are sold are meant to go on the non-active side with weather stripping to go on the active side. It appeals to me that you could do both, with some provision for the striker plate.
The ones that appealed to me on Amazon were:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006P1...PDKIKX0DER
https://www.amazon.com/Pemko-Overlapping...6QTQT8E7CQ
I've had bad luck ordering the last one of something from Amazon, so that is a strike against the Pemco. Also, one bad review. Otherwise I probably would have ordered that one, looks more substantial. The M-D building one also has some reviews that make me wonder.
Anyone have any other ideas? Seeing what's available commercially made me realize that just a flat piece of wood doesn't really resist the closing forces that well, and having a 'T' shape is better. Not sure that should stop me from making one though. Not sure what type of weather stripping to use if I did that.
The ones that appealed to me on Amazon were:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006P1...PDKIKX0DER
https://www.amazon.com/Pemko-Overlapping...6QTQT8E7CQ
I've had bad luck ordering the last one of something from Amazon, so that is a strike against the Pemco. Also, one bad review. Otherwise I probably would have ordered that one, looks more substantial. The M-D building one also has some reviews that make me wonder.
Anyone have any other ideas? Seeing what's available commercially made me realize that just a flat piece of wood doesn't really resist the closing forces that well, and having a 'T' shape is better. Not sure that should stop me from making one though. Not sure what type of weather stripping to use if I did that.