Music3 mins ago
Fitting Window Pane
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A glazier has just replaced a window pane on a red (wooden) front door. It's been held in place (somewhat erratically) by white mastic and stands out like a sore thumb compared to the other pane. Is this how glass is normally fitted? I thought he would have used putty? Also charged me £150 for the gothic glass and £120 for fitting which looks a mess! Any advice? Thanks.
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No best answer has yet been selected by medsecslave. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you paid by cheque, I would stop it now as you will need to pay someone else to do it properly.
It looks as though the glass has been fitted using silicone. You cant rub silicone down to decorate it anf finish off.
If I was getting a piece of etched glass that size .. I would be telling the supplier that £30 was over the top.
If you get someone else in they have an even bigger job to do than the first guy. They will need to put his mess right. This would involve trying to remove the glass without breaking it (very difficult and time consuming)
and making good ! .. Did he arrive in a van or on a horse..?
Well, you don't have to be in the trade to see that it's a terrible job. £150 is ridiculous, and the £120 fitting price says the guy is a chancer.
There are suitable glazing materials available such as teak putty, or paintable glazing compounds.
Confrontation is very unpleasant, but you really can't pay anything for this ......... especially £270.
There are suitable glazing materials available such as teak putty, or paintable glazing compounds.
Confrontation is very unpleasant, but you really can't pay anything for this ......... especially £270.
Well hard to tell medsec from your brief video. If that glass is acid etched it will be pretty expensive or is just a stick on film type pattern. The door looks as if it has been damaged, when the glass was broken, and had quite a few layers of paint on it, which would not have helped with a hack out of the old glass and then a reglaze. Feel that the glazier could have prepped it better before replacing the glass. Or at least pointed out to you the likely short comings in repairing an old timber door. Speak to a competent painter before tackling the glazier ( who no longer come cheap I am afraid due to EU meddling in the handling of glass). I have tried to find the type of glass you showed but cannot. Do you know its real trade name? Ask the glazier what he used to glaze the pane ( he may have used butyl which does not harden and is therefor a *** to paint)If the painter says no problem and that it is pretty much the norm you cannot really tackle the glass man if you did not get a written quote. Why has he still got your keys?
Update: The glazier spent 2.5 hours there as the pane he was replacing had been fitted without clearing out the existing glass. The door was in a poor state with a split in it so he used silicone to keep the new pane dry until he goes back to finish and will use builders cork so it can be painted. They said the silicone will be easy to remove .... keeping my fingers crossed.
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