Glossary of door shop terms – Therma-Tru SHOP 1 General Information - Book Size User Manual

Page 6

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General
Information

1.6

2014 (BOOK SIZE)

Shop 1

Glossary of Door Shop Terms

Head Bolt: A steel pin housed in a door top

edge or astragal. See foot bolt.

Head, Head Jamb: The horizontal top

frame member of a door assembly.

Hinge: An assembly of metal plates and a

cylindrical metal pin, which when fastened to

a door edge and to a door frame, allow the

door to swing or rotate in its frame.

Hinge Stile: The full-length vertical edge of

a door, at the side or edge of the door which

fastens to its frame with hinges.

Horned Sill: A sill which has been coped

or cut in such a way at its ends, so that the

sill projects across the outside face of the

bottoms of door jambs, allowing the bottom

ends of the brickmould pieces to butt and

join to the top of the sill.

IG Unit: Abbreviation for insulated glass

unit.

Impact Doors: Doors manufactured with an

internal reinforcement (steel plate) to comply

with Coastal Building Code (Impace Resis-

tance) requirements.

Impact Glass: Glass lites in either clear

or decorative designs manufactured with a

reinforcement film laminated between two

layers of glass to comply with windborne

Coastal Building requirements.

Inactive: A term for a door panel fixed in its

frame. Inactive door panels are not hinged

and are not operable.

Insulated Glass, Insulating Glass: A glass

assembly of multiple full-lite pieces, sepa-

rated by a perimeter spacer and sealed as

a unit. Insulated glass in residential doors

is usually made with two thicknesses of 1/8

inch glass, separated by an airspace up to

3/4 inch thick.

Inswing: A term used to describe an exteri-

or entry door unit for which, when the hinged

door panel is opened, the panel swings into

the building.
Jamb: A vertical perimeter frame part of a

door system.

Jamb Jack: A fastener device for fixing a

door frame to a wall structure, which allows

the space or margin between the frame and

the structure opening, to be varied by turn-

ing the fastener screw.

Jamb Stop: In exterior door frames, the

molded-in rebate surface of a frame mem-

ber against which door panels close and

seal.

Kerf: A thin slot cut into a part with a molder

or saw blade. Weatherstrip is inserted into

kerfs cut into door jambs.

King Stud: In a wood-framed rough open-

ing, the stud which runs full height from floor

plate to ceiling plate, against which trimmer

stud attaches.

Knuckle: The feature of a hinge where the

hinge leaf is cut for two or three projections

which wrap and form a barrel or socket for

the hinge pin.

Laminate: A thin face of wood or plastic,

adhesively bonded to a core or substrate,

which makes up the decorative, wear or

weatherable surface of the part.

Latch: A moveable, usually spring-loaded

pin or bolt, which is part of a lock mecha-

nism, and engages a socket or clip on a

door jamb, retaining the door closed.

Leaf: A term which can apply to a door or

hinge and which defines a part of the as-

sembly which can swing on a pivot. Butt

hinges have two leaves.

Lite: An assembly of glass and a surround-

ing frame, which is assembled to a door, or

is integrally built into the door at the factory.

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