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It was only $300 more to order and have a company install my new door than to DIY

Goose_NC

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2018
Messages
92
Location
NC
Needed to replace my 8x16 workshop door. After 38 years it was time.

I priced buying from various sources. But could not beat the price a local company offered, complete with install and taking the old (very heavy) door away. Plu I am recovering ang currently limited in lifting. I have a camera in my shop, and was watching them remove the old door. It made that $300 very worth it. Installing the new door was not "standard" either as they had to replace the top panel with one slightly smaller because of the short distance between the door opening and the ceiling. In the end, the new door fits as it should, and raises and lowers as it should. This is the second door, and opener, that this company has installed for me at this house.

I also found that the rails the pros use for the openers are one piece, not two or three pieces as sold in the stores.

I installed a couple doors in the past, but those installs were simple to do, and I was 30 years younger.
 
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Goose_NC

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Joined
Nov 20, 2018
Messages
92
Location
NC
Money well spent. As Malcolm Forbes said, "Money is nothing but a capitalist tool." Now you just have $300 fewer tools, lol.
I've been good. Only ordered about $500 in new tools, for the newer motorcycle, in the past 9 months.
 

The Cobbler

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Joined
Oct 24, 2013
Messages
25,806
Location
Niagara Region, Ontario, Canada
Yeah I found that too. in around 1995 I even had a door company install a door opener that I had bought whuile they were installing a door . I would have been at it for a few hrs to get it all tuned right... they were done before I had my coffee done sort of thing . I think they charged $35
 

PoorUB

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Joined
Mar 29, 2021
Messages
11,616
Location
Fargo, ND
I replaced my 8x16 overhead door in my garage a few years ago. I shopped around and the better doors at the home stores were roughly $1,000. I stopped by a garage door sales that a guy I sort of know owned. He wasn't in, but I talked to a salesman and he gave me a price of $1100 installed. I stopped by there a couple days later and the owner was in and saw me. He asked what he could help me with and I told him I was in the other day and got a quote for a door. He looked it up in the computer and knocked it down to $970. I told him I would have bought at $1100!
It was funny as the salesman told me 2-3 weeks. The owner had a guy out there the next day.

So yes, installed and old door and hardware hauled out for the same price. I know since COVID this market went nuts, but I was door shopping with a friend and I see it is a bit more reasonable now.
 

Bodj Built

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Joined
Feb 3, 2016
Messages
1,165
Location
Moorpark, CA
I had new tires put on the wife's car last week. The tech told me it needed a front end alignment (which I knew due to front tire wear pattern and crooked steering wheel lol. She tagged a curb...) and I told him "Do it." It was so freeing giving him $90 and having it done in, literally, 5 minutes. He showed me the alignment sheet and all looked good, and we went home. We got home and my wife asked if it was something I could have done myself (I build offroad trucks for fun), and I told her yes, but I'd spend far longer going back and forth, side to side, under, out, under, out, measure, adjust, measure, adjust, getting more and more frustrated being stuck under the Jetta without a lift, no working room... and it still wouldn't be as good as the shop with their system. It felt so freeing to not have to do something myself. One less thing off my to-do list.
 

larry4406

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Joined
Jan 27, 2006
Messages
18,975
Location
Northern Virginia
I recently spent ~4 hrs removing and installing a newish 8x8 garage door on our barn.

The door was a freebie from the day job.

Nothing wrong with hiring a pro to handle it and haul it away.

I had to then haul my old one to the dump, so another 1 hr round trip plus fuel.
 
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Stuart in MN

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Joined
Sep 8, 2005
Messages
22,988
Location
Minneapolis
I found similar with my roof. The installed price was $600 more than I priced the materials at.
I've shingled a few roofs, it's a lot of work and takes a lot of time for a DIYer. The pros come out like an invading army and job is done in no time.

There are things where it's better to just pay the man and get it over with.
 

lolaetype

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Joined
Dec 11, 2019
Messages
2,062
Location
North Western Arkansas
I've shingled a few roofs, it's a lot of work and takes a lot of time for a DIYer.
I've always said, "Everyone should shingle one roof, no one should have to do more than one".

I helped my BIL shingle a roof maybe 50 years ago. That experience taught me the value of hiring people to do that job. I'll still do a shed or door awning, something under one square, but that's it.
 

PoorUB

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Joined
Mar 29, 2021
Messages
11,616
Location
Fargo, ND
I had a couple friends help re-shingle our house around 2004. no big deal, just work. I helped my neighbor do his garage around 2010, again, no big deal. My neighbor helped me do my garage roof a couple years ago. We both thought we were going to die before we got it done. I was 45 - 50 years old the first two, 65 the last one. Getting old *****!
 
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Higgins

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Joined
Dec 25, 2009
Messages
1,924
Location
Shepheardsville, KY
I've always said, "Everyone should shingle one roof, no one should have to do more than one".

I helped my BIL shingle a roof maybe 50 years ago. That experience taught me the value of hiring people to do that job. I'll still do a shed or door awning, something under one square, but that's it.
We just had our entire roof, gutters, downspouts replaced last week 3 BR plus 2 car garage.
Was done in one day! Nine people were involved in doing the project. Two guys to PU all the roofing that came flying off the roof! another individual was auto loading all the shingles to the top of the roof. Another was picking up miscellaneous stuff!
Two crew members spent two hrs. raking stuff up, the other was using a large magnetic bar for all the nails! Total time, 10 hrs.
Following morning i was looking for nails, or the plastic disks. Couldn't find a thing!!!

Couldn't be happier!!!!

AL
 

driftpin

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Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,178
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
I had installed a new shingle roof in hurricane country (Miami-Dade County FL), and also had installed new impact-rated (Miami-Dade County FL Product Approval) doors and windows. My involvement was signing the checks. In my mid-70's, as my doctor told me, "You're too-old to be climbing to the roof." I can safely get up there if I need-to, being a retired firefighter/paramedic, but I took the steps to not have-to get up there.
 
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