Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.ratcherfratcher
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
Most of the seals are replacements for commercial doors. Mine is wood from 1971. This is molded foam that's very flexible & conforms well to my uneven floor. They say to use roofing nails to attach it. That's barely adequate & you've got to have a lot to make it secure. I've had these plastic washer headed ones for years. I don't know what they're called but the washer is about 1" in diameter. I put them about 8" apart & they seem to be working well. I received plenty for a 16' door. Probably won't withstand a weed wacker or a directed pressure washer but it seals great.
John W. Weaver
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2025
This showed up on time. Look to be a quality product. However it was not 16 ft as advertised which is what I needed. It was 15 ft 2 in..... So I had to return it.
Aleksandr K.
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024
I don't know what else to tell - yes - it will be perfect for your garage door.
George
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2024
Nice thick, soft seal; best one I have used.
mark98003
Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2024
Seal was surprisingly easy to install onto the bottom of our wooden garage door with roofing nails. Seals very well. No part of this installation was so difficult that I would have considered calling a garage door maintenance contractor.
William K Lynn
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2024
It's easy to work with!!
93428x2
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2023
The price was good for what was received. Very light weight and easy to apply. Removed the old hard rubber gasket which was very split and cracked. Previous nails were applied properly by not hammering them down too far, left about a 3/16" gap and removed them with a prybar and/or hammer. After removing all the old nails, wiped clean the entire base. Be sure that you are applying the correct side outward and flat area against the garage door. Dura-Lift photo helped. Applied 1" large head roofing nails every 4"-5" with an extra at each end. Keep the gasket straight when applying the new gasket. Be careful to not hammer the nails too deep to avoid puncturing the foam gasket. Once completed trim both ends to get a nice clean tight cut. It took about 35 minutes per garage door, from removal, to complete install. Ordered the 16' roll and applied it to two 7' single car garage doors. Nice clean finish. Great improvement.
S. Drass
Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2023
This seal does the job. It fit my old door exactly as intended. The foam rubber makes a good seal on the concrete. Don’t hammer the roofing nails down to hard or they will punch tire the soft foam. More detail: My old door bottom rubber seal had seen better days and it was time for a replacement. On top of that the concrete garage floor had settled in both sides leaving about a one inch gap 50” long on either end of the door. The door itself was still square. I cut long shims from a two by four and attached them to the door bottom. I than attached the rubber gasket seal to the bottom of the door with 65 roofing nails spaced about three inches apart. Since I was working alone I used several clamps to support the dangling part of the bottoms seal as I progressed across the door with the tedious nailing. A garbage can/tote made a great rolling tool caddy. The job turned out great and only took a couple hours to attach the seal. Cutting the shims to fit was another story, though. That took a while using my table saw.
Recommended Products