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Help with door seal

Joined
Oct 2, 2014
Messages
19
Location
Iowa
I have an issue with water getting into my pole building. The floor isn't exactly level where the garage door seal hits so there are sections where the seal doesn't seal against the floor.

How can I remedy this?

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pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
Too late now short of cutting the apron, but the floor/apron at the door should have been sloped for the water to run away from the inside.
 

matt_i

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 14, 2008
Messages
10,723
Location
SE Michigan
I have same problem. What I will do someday is snap a chalkline on the inside of the door. Then use hand grinder with segmented wheel and flatten the area where the door gasket sits by 1/8". Some careful work needs to happen with a straightedge at the end to pick out the high spots and address those just like you were scraping a machine way.

Its not as ideal as pre-casting this into the concrete but I believe it will work except for he heaviest wind-driven rain. right now light rains seep in which I think is a product of the internal slope down towards the central floor drain.
 

yeldogt

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 2, 2012
Messages
18,184
If it's the water running down the door .. the glue on threshold will work if the floor can be level enough to install. That's why it always best to have the door in-set a bit from the plane of the building or have an small awning/overhang over the door.
If its water running back to the door from the ground out front -- you may have a problem.

I always do my garage floors with a lip -- the door drops down lower than the garage floor. When the door is closed the rubber is now bellow the floor -- this stopes even wind driven rain and also keeps stuff from blowing into the garage.
 
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OP
I
Joined
Oct 2, 2014
Messages
19
Location
Iowa
If it's the water running down the door .. the glue on threshold will work if the floor can be level enough to install. That's why it always best to have the door in-set a bit from the plane of the building or have an small awning/overhang over the door.
If its water running back to the door from the ground out front -- you may have a problem.

I always do my garage floors with a lip -- the door drops down lower than the garage floor. When the door is closed the rubber is now bellow the floor -- this stopes even wind driven rain and also keeps stuff from blowing into the garage.
It's not water running downhill to the door. It may be rain hitting the door and running down.

So it sounds like either a bigger bottom seal for the bottom of the door or a threshold strip are the easiest solutions.
 

PassnThru

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 5, 2010
Messages
6,510
Location
Bowling Green KY
I have same problem. What I will do someday is snap a chalkline on the inside of the door. Then use hand grinder with segmented wheel and flatten the area where the door gasket sits by 1/8". Some careful work needs to happen with a straightedge at the end to pick out the high spots and address those just like you were scraping a machine way.

Its not as ideal as pre-casting this into the concrete but I believe it will work except for he heaviest wind-driven rain. right now light rains seep in which I think is a product of the internal slope down towards the central floor drain.

I have a small roll up door that faces West and had the same issue. Since I was only dealing with a 5 foot wide area I did the grinder with a cup wheel from HF to take out the high spot. Work slowly and recheck with a level often. It's hard to put material back on. I was very conservative about it and so far so good. During a storm with wind driven I'll get some in but not nearly as much as before. During a normal rain all is dry.
 

southview

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 28, 2008
Messages
66
Location
Viera, Fl
You can buy a rubber garage threshold strip at Harbor Freight. They work great. Had the same problem on an old house garage. I laid a bead of silicone and put it down. No more water.:rocker:
 

glentre

Well-known member
Joined
May 21, 2016
Messages
909
Location
Gloucester, Virginia
I had the same problem with one of my three brand new doors installed only three weeks ago. While there is a pocket for the door to fit down into and no water can enter because of the step down, there was a crown in the concrete in the middle of the opening which would allow cold air and wind driven snow to get in on either side.

The installers came back and simply removed the bottom door seal and installed a thicker one which compressed more to fill the gap. Took them about ten minutes.

Glen
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
Have that issue on one corner of the door - if rain is forecast, I throw down a couple of big fluffy towels on that side and don't worry about it. I have more trouble with wind from the northwest blowing water under the man door past the seal. We're all about wind here LOL. 50+ MPH WNW last Sunday.
 
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