If you are fitting your own uPVC Windows and Doors you might find the following information useful:

 

 

Adjusting the Door Hinge

 

If your door is difficult to lock or is catching on the frame slightly the door may need adjusting via the hinge.

Our Doors are fitted with flag hinges which means the Door can be adjusted up and down and left and right.

Slowly close the door and you will be able to see where the door sash looks like it is catching, looks tight or is too far away from the keeps. Once the problem has been found adjust the desired hinge.

 

**Firstly open the door and with a flat head screwdriver pop open the hinge cap (see below):

 

hinge.png

 

Push the catch to allow Hinge to pop open (see above).

 

Adjust hinge to where it needs to be (see below)

 

   hinge2.png

Using the desired allen key, turn the key untill you notice the door sash either pulling forward or back..

 

You should be able to find the required adjustment to get your door working properly again.

How to Toe and Heel Correctly

 

UPVC doors are heavy, and although the dead weight is supported on the hinge side when it is opened, there is nothing on the lock side to support the weight, and without employing the procedure of toe and heeling, the door will, sooner or later, 'drop' on the handle side. To stop a door dropping, the glass itself has to be braced diagonally corner to corner by the insertion of plastic packers slipped in the gap between the glass and frame, under the beading. On the hinge side the packers go at the bottom corner, whilst on the lock side, the packers go at the top (opposite) corner.

If you can imagine the back of a normal wooden side gate, you will see three horizontal planks - one top, one middle, and one bottom. These planks are used for the diagonal planks of wood to sit on so as to brace across, and therefore to stop the gate dropping on the lock/handle side.

 

So does my door need toeing and heeling?

When a UPVC door has 'dropped' the first thing people usually notice is that the lock is not working as easily as it did, or will not lock at all. The door may also possibly rub on the bottom as it is closed. Closer inspection may reveal that the mitred welds do not line through at the top and the bottom of the lock side of the door to its framework. If this is the case on any door, then the door will need bringing back to square and it will then need 'toeing and heeling' to prevent it from dropping again in the future. If you suspect that your door may have dropped, then the easiest way to check is to measure corner to corner across the diagonals of the door, and verify that the measurements are near enough the same, or to within a couple of mm or so. A quarter of an inch difference in measurements is too much!

 

The dropping of a uPVC door is the most common complaint and part of the reason why so many doors drop is failure to follow this procedure properly. To ensure correct and sustained operation of a UPVC door, it is imperative to get the toeing and heeling right the first time.

 

hinge3.jpg

 

 

How to Toe and Heel a door, properly:


  1. The glazing bead must be removed, and the double glazed sealed unit must be in place, and resting on its plastic packers, for correct drainage to work properly before beginning the procedure.

 

  1. The opening door leaf must be raised on the lock side to the desired height, to square it up again. For one person to do this on their own; open the door slightly, place a small piece of wood on the floor to use as a fulcrum and in line with the door. Next, place a plank under the lock side of the door to push down on with your foot to raise up the side of the door that has dropped. A word of warning: Some doors will rise up and come off of their hinges, and these are harder to 'jack'.

 

  1. You should notice a gap between the sealed unit and the door, and this is where the packers are inserted to achieve your toeing and heeling correctly to brace across the glass to stop the lock side of the door dropping out of square

*Please note toe and heeling must also be used on all side opening windows*