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2006-09-08 08:17:19 · 12 answers · asked by curious 4 in Home & Garden Decorating & Remodeling

12 answers

The part of a doorway that divides the two doors.... the middle part that the doors latch too.

2006-09-08 08:19:21 · answer #1 · answered by wildflower 4 · 0 1

A mullion is a framing element which divides adjacent window, door, or glass units. Mullions may be made of any material, but wood and aluminum are most common, although stone is also used in windows. Mullions are most commonly vertical or horizontal and sometimes diagonal, although more complex arrangements were popular during the Tudor era.

A mullion acts as a structural member, and carries the dead load of the glass and the wind load acting on the glass to the anchor point and back to the building structure. Mullions vary from small members in doors or small glass areas, to very large and deep structural members in many curtain wall systems.

In the past, mullions were necessary because it was not possible to produce sufficiently large panes of glass. In double-glazed windows, a grid resembling mullions is sometimes sandwiched between the panes as decoration. This is called a false mullion or muntin. A false mullion may also be attached to the front face of the glass for an aesthetic division of the glass because it is more costly to produce and install large quantities of smaller panes of glass.

2006-09-08 08:24:09 · answer #2 · answered by Luiz 4 · 2 0

A mullion is a framing element which divides adjacent window, door, or glass units. Mullions may be made of any material, but wood and aluminum are most common, although stone is also used in windows. Mullions are most commonly vertical or horizontal and sometimes diagonal, although more complex arrangements were popular during the Tudor era.

A mullion acts as a structural member, and carries the dead load of the glass and the wind load acting on the glass to the anchor point and back to the building structure. Mullions vary from small members in doors or small glass areas, to very large and deep structural members in many curtain wall systems.

In the past, mullions were necessary because it was not possible to produce sufficiently large panes of glass. In double-glazed windows, a grid resembling mullions is sometimes sandwiched between the panes as decoration. This is called a false mullion or muntin. A false mullion may also be attached to the front face of the glass for an aesthetic division of the glass because it is more costly to produce and install large quantities of smaller panes of glass.
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2006-09-08 08:23:20 · answer #3 · answered by Nick C 1 · 3 0

Noun 1. mullion - a nonstructural vertical strip between the casements or panes of a window (or the panels of a screen)

A mullion is a framing element which divides adjacent window, door, or glass units. Mullions may be made of any material, but wood and aluminum are most common, although stone is also used in windows. Mullions are most commonly vertical or horizontal and sometimes diagonal, although more complex arrangements were popular during the Tudor era.

A mullion acts as a structural member, and carries the dead load of the glass and the wind load acting on the glass to the anchor point and back to the building structure. Mullions vary from small members in doors or small glass areas, to very large and deep structural members in many curtain wall systems.

In the past, mullions were necessary because it was not possible to produce sufficiently large panes of glass. In double-glazed windows, a grid resembling mullions is sometimes sandwiched between the panes as decoration. This is called a false mullion or muntin. A false mullion may also be attached to the front face of the glass for an aesthetic division of the glass because it is more costly to produce and install large quantities of smaller panes of glass.

2006-09-08 08:19:50 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

is a framing element which divides adjacent window, door, or glass units. Mullions may be made of any material, but wood and aluminum are most common, although stone is also used in windows. Mullions are most commonly vertical or horizontal and sometimes diagonal, although more complex arrangements were popular during the Tudor era.

A mullion acts as a structural member, and carries the dead load of the glass and the wind load acting on the glass to the anchor point and back to the building structure. Mullions vary from small members in doors or small glass areas, to very large and deep structural members in many curtain wall systems.

In the past, mullions were necessary because it was not possible to produce sufficiently large panes of glass. In double-glazed windows, a grid resembling mullions is sometimes sandwiched between the panes as decoration. This is called a false mullion or muntin. A false mullion may also be attached to the front face of the glass for an aesthetic division of the glass because it is more costly to produce and install large quantities of smaller panes of glass.

2006-09-08 08:23:44 · answer #5 · answered by Spock 6 · 3 0

A piece of Trim that makes a joint look nice, the Divder on a French door, is not a Mullion, thats called a T astrical strip.

2006-09-08 08:22:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

What Is A Mullion

2016-09-28 06:25:31 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

refrigeration- heating wires placed around frames or doors of refrigeration equipment stop sweat ,frost or ice build up.

2017-03-04 23:04:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A vertical member, as of stone or wood, dividing a window or other opening

2006-09-08 08:20:18 · answer #9 · answered by thomasrobinsonantonio 7 · 1 0

mul·lion (mŭl'yən)
n.
A vertical member, as of stone or wood, dividing a window or other opening.

2006-09-08 08:24:00 · answer #10 · answered by keri0426 3 · 1 0

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