For a roller door there is weather stripping on the bottom of the door and an adjustment screw on the garage door opener that you can adjust to remove most gaps.
Very timely! I've been putting up with some old lagging wedged against the back edge of the door to stop the rain blowing under the door (then leaving the garage by the side door after erecting the makeshift barrier). This would be a much better job and it's only motorbikes being pushed in and out so it wouldn't get too squished. Cheers Roger!
At least Roger gets on with the job. Tells us what he is doing while he is actually doing it👍👍 All Robin does is Yak! Yak! Yak! with very little content. Nice one Roger👍👍
Nice job.👍 Did this myself and keeps majority of debris out. My tip is wear gloves and old clothes as that sealant doesnt come off, bloody good stuff tbough
These strips work ok when the door is shut. The problems with leaves & dust start when you open it & a 7'x7' foot gap appears. If you use your garage as a workshop & you want it kept clean:- fit a side door (where possible) & buy a leaf blower to periodically clean it out + fit a rubber strip to the door, rather than the floor, then you don't drive over it.
It doesn't work for us who have a garage with a floor that slopes the wrong way. In that situation, a strip on the floor is easier and cheaper than pouring a new floor.
Hello, I need some advice. This product looks good for the lower gap but what about the sides? For the past few years, my driveway leading to my garage keeps flooding when a downpour of rain happens. Last year, it came up the door 1 foot due to drains not good enough for the job, so i really need to seal the sides of the door. I have an up and over door and need advice on what product i need to seal in the garage for the bad days. I really hope you can help. Thank you
Lucky guy! At least he's not got one like mine. For some reason the gap under our single garage door is from 10mm one end to 50mm the other as the garage floor falls to one side...Hmmm, yes I'm familiar with the smell of mice...
Maybe fix a piece of flat rubber to the back of the door and cut it at an angle to close the gaps. Adhesive and nut and bolt fixing with large washers should do the trick.
I recently fitted new garage doors and went to fit behind rather than fit within. Moving the doors back exposed some of the rough finished concrete floor. Now in extreme rain I get some water under the door. Would this rubber strip bond to a rough finished concrete? Thanks Roger
My garage is rough fitted concrete and the adhesive worked fine, just try to clean the floor as best you can beforehand and make sure you use plenty of sealant to ensure there aren't any gaps left between the seal and the concrete. Alternative you can try to sand the concrete down to make it smooth like they did in the video, but I think you need the right tools for that.
A roller door has a weather strip on the bottom of the door. Sometimes these need to be replaced. But first check the garage door opener. There should be a screw that adjusts where it stops. You should be able to use that and remove any gap you have.
Agree, if you remove that ventilation gap in wet & windy UK you may then need an Incandescent Dehumidifier - Though that will then also stop his tools going rusty….👍
0:18 Stating the obvious - why not put the normal and typical seal on the bottom of the door? No offense, but this seems more like an advertisement for a product than the best solution for the problem.
It’s the cold and the damp we have to worry about here and will do for many decades to come! Plenty of other things to stress about though as this country goes to the dogs.
I fitted one of these a few years ago for a client - it's still going strong!!
This is so timely. First time in 30 years I'm getting rain "hard blowing rain" coming under a fairy new clean garage door gasket.
For a roller door there is weather stripping on the bottom of the door and an adjustment screw on the garage door opener that you can adjust to remove most gaps.
These are good. Did one in my old garage and it worked a treat.
Very timely! I've been putting up with some old lagging wedged against the back edge of the door to stop the rain blowing under the door (then leaving the garage by the side door after erecting the makeshift barrier). This would be a much better job and it's only motorbikes being pushed in and out so it wouldn't get too squished. Cheers Roger!
I screwed some DPC to the bottom of my door. Flexible, cheap, no ridge on the floor. Lasted years.
a much better video than the actual Garadry version as yours is close up and in focus!
I had some old roof bars that I used for this. Work a treat.
good idea
The grey pipe lagging works fine fixed on the bottom of my garage door.
At least Roger gets on with the job. Tells us what he is doing while he is actually doing it👍👍
All Robin does is Yak! Yak! Yak! with very little content. Nice one Roger👍👍
Jeffrey looks well chuffed 😂
Absolutely brilliant them Rodger. I'm very impressed.👍👍
Nice job.👍 Did this myself and keeps majority of debris out.
My tip is wear gloves and old clothes as that sealant doesnt come off, bloody good stuff tbough
Does Jeff ever take his hands out of his pockets?
Poor guy has had to buy a weather strip. No money left for a belt
Sensible chap. I love hard work I could watch it all day
doesn’t need to - Rog is doing all the work, Jeff is supervising
No, otherwise he might have to do some work... 😂
Billiards
I just installed the exact same seal. 😊
I've just got a strip of roof felt attached to the back of the garage door. Been there years and fills the gap under the door.
Love the idea, but my house builder forgot to put the cement in the garage floor concrete, so I don't think it would stick to dust
nice little job there Rodger
Like that . We need one of those . Nice quick fix 👌🏼🧱👍🏽
The legend is that... Jeff can build a brick wall with both hands in his pocket 🤣
Looks better than the weather strip I attached to the bottom of my garage door which lets driving rain in still.
These strips work ok when the door is shut. The problems with leaves & dust start when you open it & a 7'x7' foot gap appears.
If you use your garage as a workshop & you want it kept clean:- fit a side door (where possible) & buy a leaf blower to periodically clean it out + fit a rubber strip to the door, rather than the floor, then you don't drive over it.
It doesn't work for us who have a garage with a floor that slopes the wrong way. In that situation, a strip on the floor is easier and cheaper than pouring a new floor.
Shop vac is much better
What a good idea .
Screw/ glue a thin aluminium to the bottom,front edge of the door as close as you can to the floor level. Easy, cheap.
Jeff has 2 garage doors?! 😲 Must be in Surrey!
Nuffin loik 'aving Bricktop doing yer garage threshold, moy son. Loik bringing the rodents' nemesis in on the job. Brilliant!
Cheers, just ordered some
Geoff should have electric roller garage doors, poor man😁
Interesting. Fastens to floor vice bottom of door.
Hello, I need some advice.
This product looks good for the lower gap but what about the sides?
For the past few years, my driveway leading to my garage keeps flooding when a downpour of rain happens.
Last year, it came up the door 1 foot due to drains not good enough for the job, so i really need to seal the sides of the door.
I have an up and over door and need advice on what product i need to seal in the garage for the bad days.
I really hope you can help. Thank you
look like a decent bit of kit.
U want that on the underside of the door ,not on the floor . Its just a trip hazard and a pain to sweep
👍👍👍Thank you.
Lucky guy! At least he's not got one like mine. For some reason the gap under our single garage door is from 10mm one end to 50mm the other as the garage floor falls to one side...Hmmm, yes I'm familiar with the smell of mice...
Maybe fix a piece of flat rubber to the back of the door and cut it at an angle to close the gaps. Adhesive and nut and bolt fixing with large washers should do the trick.
This would be ideal for my garage, however does anybody know if it stays in place strong enough to handle a car going over it?
very good work roger !
Might get one
Shocking price for what it is!
Odd. In the US it's common to have the seal on the door. Much better solution imo
I recently fitted new garage doors and went to fit behind rather than fit within. Moving the doors back exposed some of the rough finished concrete floor. Now in extreme rain I get some water under the door. Would this rubber strip bond to a rough finished concrete?
Thanks Roger
My garage is rough fitted concrete and the adhesive worked fine, just try to clean the floor as best you can beforehand and make sure you use plenty of sealant to ensure there aren't any gaps left between the seal and the concrete. Alternative you can try to sand the concrete down to make it smooth like they did in the video, but I think you need the right tools for that.
@@ChrisThomson Thank you Chris, much appreciated
Keep mice out, LOL, you have ZERO chance of that happening 😁😁😁
Is there anything like this for a roller door ?
A roller door has a weather strip on the bottom of the door. Sometimes these need to be replaced. But first check the garage door opener. There should be a screw that adjusts where it stops. You should be able to use that and remove any gap you have.
Hopefully he won't find his garage full of mould next spring
Agree, if you remove that ventilation gap in wet & windy UK you may then need an Incandescent Dehumidifier - Though that will then also stop his tools going rusty….👍
Diamond
Was this a sponsored vid by any chance?
no
Smile Jeff…..that glue won’t hold for long
Mines been stuck down for 6 years.
put in backwards
0:18 Stating the obvious - why not put the normal and typical seal on the bottom of the door? No offense, but this seems more like an advertisement for a product than the best solution for the problem.
The concrete floor should be unimpeded, strip should be attached to door(?)!
He can do what he wants to his garage 🙄
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You all need to start getting AC in your homes to get ready for climate change.
That will make it worse
It’s the cold and the damp we have to worry about here and will do for many decades to come! Plenty of other things to stress about though as this country goes to the dogs.