lilscorpion
Well-known member
I'm not sure if everyone has a dog door or not but if you do, it's very likely you've questioned how secure it actually is.. Every time I open or close it I am reminded how big a piece of **** mine is and how easy it would be for someone to just kick it in. There are a few doors out there that are supposedly constructed out of durable and quality materials however the prices tend to be adjusted to compensate when they do. An all aluminum door, in the size I have (21 x 15 opening), will run you approximately $400. I pondered just buying one to be done with it but my wife commented "can't you build it for less?" Yes dear...damn.
The poor design is obvious from a distance but when you start looking at the doors feature up close, you begin to see just how poor the design of this door really is. For starters, other than the hardware, the constructed purely of plastic. A prybar would pop it right off. If anyone thinks that these doors provide any level of security, wrong.
When building something, I avoid re-inventing the wheel. If all I need to do is make a few improvements to a design, that's all I'll do (unless for some reason I feel the need to way over design something for the fun of it but this is not that project). Every so often I like to put things into Google SketchUp so I can think through the design before I build it. I've been working on this idea for nearly a year now and had been stuck on a stupid design flaw that I couldn't get over until one night my wife "nudged" my creativity by asking if the dog door was ever gonna get fixed.
The design is simple really, instead of trying to get crazy creative, I'll make an inner and outer ring that interlock into each other through the door. The outer ring will sleeve into the inner ring (inner being the one inside). I'll use extruded aluminum angle to build the rings as show in the image above. The red colored sections is where the angle will have to be relief cut after being welded.
Action shot of me cutting the angle on the miter saw. The cuts are fairly square however I like to true them on the mill to make sure they are perfectly square. This helps during assembly because I can use clamps to pull the assembly square, check it with a square, and then weld. If I don't true the ends, I have to use a square to square them as I clamp them and I'm not a fan of that method.
http://www.3amcook.com/Images/Projects/DogDoorD.jpg
I'll start with assembling the inner ring. With the material cut and squared, I clamp it to the edge of the counter so I can visualize the assembly and then clamp the whole assembly together to see if just doing so results in 90 degree angles. Here's a picture of one of the corners. I will drop a verticle fillet weld down the inner edge here to fuse the corner then I will remove the excess (this is one of the red areas in the sketchup drawing).
about 6 years ago now I purchased a Miller 212 AutoSet to replace my Miller 250x which had a couple hundred thousand miles on it. At the time I had a miller 3035 spool gun that I used on another one of my machines from time to time. Anyway, Miller's website had an error on it which led me to believe that i could order a 212 AS and plug my spool gun into it. As luck would have it, the 212 AS was the only machine that my gun wouldn't ever fit and to make up for their website error they sent me, free of charge, this 30A without me even asking. If I wasn't blue through and through before, I assure I was after that act of kindness. Anyway, here she is ready to throw down.
Beautiful thing about modern technology is that the manuals and pre-sets are usually fairly close. I look it up on the book (or on their moble app from the apple app store), set to the recommended settings, and hammer down. I have maybe a dozen total hours accumulated on spool guns and aluminum mig welding and, even though I have thousands of hours of regular mig welded, the equipment makes me look good. It has been about 3 years since I pulled the trigger on a spool gun. I tested a spot weld on a piece of scrap AL to make sure it was hooked up right, and then threw this down on the first try.
The only thing I don't like about AL welding is that it's fairly difficult to get all of the parts to align up to get a soot-free (no black) weld. I get plenty good penetration but it always leaves a little black. Since you have to push, use argon that hasn't "spoiled", use contaminate free filler, clean the material to get the contaminates off the surface, and fly as you keep your position, it's really easy to fall short in one of those places and get the black soot. As long as I get a good weld I guess. After cutting the corners out I sand them smooth with a small angle grinder and some scotch pads. The measurements are good and it lays nice and flat on the table.
Now that it's fully welded, I see that the 1/8-inch angle is going to be much stronger than I thought it was...probably 1000 times stronger than the plastic **** it will replace. The size measures out correctly - exactly the same size as the previous door.
I almost always make mistakes when ordering material. Because I was in a hurry to get started, I just "ordered a couple of sticks" hoping that they'd be enough. Now that I figured my cuts, I was unable to get all of the pieces and, as a result, have to put the project on hold until another stick shows up. The good news is my design looks like it will work well and accomplish what it was supposed to.
The poor design is obvious from a distance but when you start looking at the doors feature up close, you begin to see just how poor the design of this door really is. For starters, other than the hardware, the constructed purely of plastic. A prybar would pop it right off. If anyone thinks that these doors provide any level of security, wrong.
When building something, I avoid re-inventing the wheel. If all I need to do is make a few improvements to a design, that's all I'll do (unless for some reason I feel the need to way over design something for the fun of it but this is not that project). Every so often I like to put things into Google SketchUp so I can think through the design before I build it. I've been working on this idea for nearly a year now and had been stuck on a stupid design flaw that I couldn't get over until one night my wife "nudged" my creativity by asking if the dog door was ever gonna get fixed.
The design is simple really, instead of trying to get crazy creative, I'll make an inner and outer ring that interlock into each other through the door. The outer ring will sleeve into the inner ring (inner being the one inside). I'll use extruded aluminum angle to build the rings as show in the image above. The red colored sections is where the angle will have to be relief cut after being welded.
Action shot of me cutting the angle on the miter saw. The cuts are fairly square however I like to true them on the mill to make sure they are perfectly square. This helps during assembly because I can use clamps to pull the assembly square, check it with a square, and then weld. If I don't true the ends, I have to use a square to square them as I clamp them and I'm not a fan of that method.
http://www.3amcook.com/Images/Projects/DogDoorD.jpg
I'll start with assembling the inner ring. With the material cut and squared, I clamp it to the edge of the counter so I can visualize the assembly and then clamp the whole assembly together to see if just doing so results in 90 degree angles. Here's a picture of one of the corners. I will drop a verticle fillet weld down the inner edge here to fuse the corner then I will remove the excess (this is one of the red areas in the sketchup drawing).
about 6 years ago now I purchased a Miller 212 AutoSet to replace my Miller 250x which had a couple hundred thousand miles on it. At the time I had a miller 3035 spool gun that I used on another one of my machines from time to time. Anyway, Miller's website had an error on it which led me to believe that i could order a 212 AS and plug my spool gun into it. As luck would have it, the 212 AS was the only machine that my gun wouldn't ever fit and to make up for their website error they sent me, free of charge, this 30A without me even asking. If I wasn't blue through and through before, I assure I was after that act of kindness. Anyway, here she is ready to throw down.
Beautiful thing about modern technology is that the manuals and pre-sets are usually fairly close. I look it up on the book (or on their moble app from the apple app store), set to the recommended settings, and hammer down. I have maybe a dozen total hours accumulated on spool guns and aluminum mig welding and, even though I have thousands of hours of regular mig welded, the equipment makes me look good. It has been about 3 years since I pulled the trigger on a spool gun. I tested a spot weld on a piece of scrap AL to make sure it was hooked up right, and then threw this down on the first try.
The only thing I don't like about AL welding is that it's fairly difficult to get all of the parts to align up to get a soot-free (no black) weld. I get plenty good penetration but it always leaves a little black. Since you have to push, use argon that hasn't "spoiled", use contaminate free filler, clean the material to get the contaminates off the surface, and fly as you keep your position, it's really easy to fall short in one of those places and get the black soot. As long as I get a good weld I guess. After cutting the corners out I sand them smooth with a small angle grinder and some scotch pads. The measurements are good and it lays nice and flat on the table.
Now that it's fully welded, I see that the 1/8-inch angle is going to be much stronger than I thought it was...probably 1000 times stronger than the plastic **** it will replace. The size measures out correctly - exactly the same size as the previous door.
I almost always make mistakes when ordering material. Because I was in a hurry to get started, I just "ordered a couple of sticks" hoping that they'd be enough. Now that I figured my cuts, I was unable to get all of the pieces and, as a result, have to put the project on hold until another stick shows up. The good news is my design looks like it will work well and accomplish what it was supposed to.
