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I am looking to see if there is a way to build a dog door that I place in the wall without using a pre-manufactured kit. ANyone have directions on how to create a sealed pet door for 4 labs to use. Looking to save a few bucks instead of buying a Petsafe door that has a U seal that breaks all too often. I am looking to create a double door so that it creates an insulation of air between the doors. Any Idea's? plans?

2007-03-23 04:43:46 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Do It Yourself (DIY)

2 answers

They are not very expensive to why not buy one already made and follow the instructions.

I have them in this house and had to make them because there are none here to be bought.

2007-03-23 05:05:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

1

2017-01-22 18:35:00 · answer #2 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

RE:
build a dog door?
I am looking to see if there is a way to build a dog door that I place in the wall without using a pre-manufactured kit. ANyone have directions on how to create a sealed pet door for 4 labs to use. Looking to save a few bucks instead of buying a Petsafe door that has a U seal that breaks all too...

2015-08-04 06:37:17 · answer #3 · answered by ? 1 · 1 0

Certainly there are options for a DIY.

Without knowing where you live, or the budget you may want to restrict yourself too, or if you care much about aesthetics you might go to a local food market and look at the passage way that leads from the Frozen Food/Deli/Seafood area to the display case. Clear, soft, vinyl, often in flaps that hang in a door frame situation.

You might also consider it crafted from wood, even doubled using swing hinges, much like an old time saloon door, or restaurant door that has to return to a closed position. In that example with only the thickness of the external wall it's likely the 4 door flaps would never "jam" Obviously the dogs will figure it out.

Your issue in any case is retention of heat and/or AC, and caulking, weather stripping, rubber sheet flaps overlapping on a double, double, wooden door will help.

You'll compromise insulation properties to some degree, just in the creation of any opening that allows such freedom of access, but that isn't something I can measure in not knowing location and other geographical details.

Steven Wolf

2007-03-23 05:23:50 · answer #4 · answered by DIY Doc 7 · 2 1

SORRY FOR THE LONG ANSWER.
I consider myself pretty handy, but the door I made stunk. I made several attempts and nothing worked properly. The main problem is getting the door to hang straight without a gap at the bottom. I tried counterweights. My door was mounted in the garage door to the back yard. The wind would cause it to swing open. I embedded magnets which was a real pain. They had to be recessed to keep from snagging a doggy nose. Wet dog noses made a real mess of my nice paint job. Next problem: With four labs you will have a lot of nose mashing when one lab runs out and another is running in at the same time. It happened all the time with just my two labs. I ended up buying one with a clear flexable panel. Its easy to clean and comes with a seperate solid panel to keep the dogs in or keep them out or for security. Oh, and because it's clear it ended all the mid door lab collisons. I've had it 6 years with no problems. Got it at Petsmart.

2007-03-23 23:31:01 · answer #5 · answered by mountainriley 6 · 0 0

If you are planning to start on your woodworking project, this isn't something you should use, it's something that you would be insane not to. Go here https://tr.im/y0ckM
Truth is, I've been a carpenter for almost 36 years, and I haven't found anything like this for less than 10's of thousands of dollars.

2016-02-09 22:28:39 · answer #6 · answered by Sheba 3 · 0 0

Buy a pre made one ....

2007-03-27 02:09:42 · answer #7 · answered by Juliette 6 · 0 1

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