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Thread: Window grilles?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Salt Water Workshop, Buxton Maine
    Posts
    62

    Default Window grilles?

    I build these carriage house overhead doors for a local overhead door company. I bought a shopbot 1 1/2 yrs ago, and I'd love to use it to make these curved top window grilles for these doors. It would save me hours of work if I could put a sheet of goods on the table, program the grille into the computer, and let the bot do it.

    About half of these doors I build are cvg red cedar left natural, so I have to build those grilles by hand. For the painted doors, a dissimilar material would work since it'll be painted.

    What would be a good material that comes in sheet goods to cut these out of? My first thought was pvc (Azek), but the muntins are about 3/4" wide and I wonder if they would deflect when being machined.

    I tried to attach an image of the doors, but the file size 80kb and the allowable upload size is 50kb. The file is a pdf. How do I re-size it so I can upload it?

    Thanks,

    Jim

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Baton Rouge LA
    Posts
    28

    Default

    You can copy & paste into PAINT. Then size as needed. Save as J-PEG.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    7,832

    Default

    Jim,
    go to www.xat.com and download "jpeg optimizer"
    its free it will let you lower the kilobyte size of your pictures while allowing you to keep the deminsions large enough to view.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Salt Water Workshop, Buxton Maine
    Posts
    62

    Default


    39069.jpg

    This is a typical curved-top door I'm referring to. I make matching inner and outer grilles and sandwich the glass in between. At present, I cut the radius (usually about 12') for the top piece of the grille out of a 1x6, then stick-build the rest of the grille. After all the parts are glued/screwed together, I run a router around the inner edges to give it some detail. The time savings would be huge if I could cut the whole grille out of sheet goods, but before experimenting, I just wondered what the best material would be...extira, pvc (Azek), mdo etc.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Odyssey Wood Products, Joppa Maryland
    Posts
    48

    Default

    Jim

    Here are a few photos of a grill we cut out of Azek for patio doors. We used 1/2" thick Azek and the grill bars are 3/4" wide. We done all the profiling cuts first leaving a .04 skin on the bottom. We then came back with a 1/8" cutter and cut the grill out but still left tabs in order to keep the bars from bowing.

    39180.jpg

    39181.jpg

    Sam

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    366

    Default

    I'm very curious about the use of the term "Grille" here. I work for a vinyl window & door manufacturer on the west coast, and we always have referred to them as "grids". Is this an east coast/west coast terminology thing like sash/vent?

    g.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    7,832

    Default

    I'm on the east coast and i've always heard them called "grilles". But if you were to put that design to a piece of paper I would call it a grid. So i'm sure it is just a interchangable term.
    "You say potato, i say po-tot-oe.....

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Beckwith Decor Products, Derby/Wichita KS
    Posts
    612

    Default

    We just like to throw shrimp on ours grille around here

    But then we also call it a barbie!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Salt Water Workshop, Buxton Maine
    Posts
    62

    Default

    Grids or grilles, same thing around here. Everyone nows what you're talking about. To me a grille is a removeable piece whereas a grid is built into a window fixed in place between the glass.


    Sam,

    That's exactly what I'm aiming to do. At what point did you put the routed edge on the grilles? I hadn't thought about tabs, but I have used them before so I can see how they would help. But with a tab in the way, I don't see how the 'bot could put the routed edge on. When I build these by hand, I stick build them then run an ogee bit with a bearing around the inside edges. I suppose I could just do the profile cut on the 'bot then router the edges by hand.

    Thanks,

    Jim

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Des Moines, Iowa
    Posts
    499

    Default

    Seems to me the routed edge would just be a V-bit run first to get the chamfered edge and then a straight bit to cut the Grilles out. I do this on MDF letters all the time to get that same look.

    -D

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