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Magnolia Metal & Plastic Products |
Magnolia Metal & Plastic Products |
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How to Repair Window Screens
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Repairing and replacing screens fits
easily under the heading of do-it-yourself projects.
Screen repair is among the simplest of jobs. In this
document you will find information about:
- Screen Repairs
- Replacing Screening in Wood Frames
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- Replacing Screening in Metal Frames
- Frame Repairs
- Painting Screens
- Cleaning Screens
Tools and Materials
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18" x 16" or
18" x 14" Screening |
Screwdriver
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Exterior Trim
Paint |
| Snap-On Screen
Patches |
Long-Nosed
Pliers |
1x2 and 1x4
Stock |
| Heavy-Duty
Scissors |
Metal Snips
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Paint Solvent
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| Heavy-Duty
Stapler |
Tack Hammer
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Sandpaper, 80
or 100 Grit |
| Try Square or
Framing Square |
Spline Tool
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Clean-Up Rags
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| Measuring Tape
or Rule |
Sawhorses
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Garden Hose
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| Utility Knife
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Screws |
Stiff-Bristled
Brush |
| Claw Hammer
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Dowels, 3/8"
or 1/2" |
2x4 Boards
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| Screen Molding
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Mending Plates
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2 C-Clamps, 3"
or Larger |
| Nail Set |
Shop Vacuum
with Upholstery Brush |
Exterior Wood
Glue |
| Drill and Bits
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Paintbrush or
Pad |
Plastic Spline
Material
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STEP 1
FIG. 1 - Unravel several strands from the
patching material or use a ready-made, snap-on
patch.
FIG. 2 - Slip the bent strands of the
patch through the screening, then bend them back
to hold the patch in. |
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SCREEN REPAIRS
- You can easily patch most small holes.
It's only when a hole exceeds about 3" in
diameter that the screening itself needs to
be replaced.
- Measure hole sizes and purchase
ready-made, snap-on repair patches or cut
them from new screening. A patch should be
at least 1/2" larger in diameter than the
hole. For bigger holes, the patch should be
as much as 1" larger.
- For metal and most fiberglass screen
patches, use this procedure: Unravel a
number of strands around the edges of the
patch one or two rows back from the edges,
depending on the patch size (Fig. 1). Then
weave the strands through the screening and
bend them tight (Fig. 2). You can usually
bend the strands with your fingers, but if
the patch is heavy duty, you may need
long-nosed pliers. Plastic patches need a
touch of household cement on the ends of the
strands after they've been woven through.
- You can patch small holes–1/4" to
3/8"–with a small amount of household cement
(Fig. 3). This glue patch will be next to
invisible.
- Fiberglass and plastic screens are tough
to patch and should probably be replaced.
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STEP 2
FIG. 4 - For the cleat-and-wedge method
of stretching a new screen, first staple the
screening across the top of the frame.
FIG. 5 - Then nail down the longer end
between two cleats.
FIG. 6 - Insert wedges between the cleats
and frame, tapping them in gently until the
screen pulls taut.
FIG. 7 - Now you can staple the
screening along the bottom and both sides.
FIG. 8 - For longer frames, place the
unit on sawhorses over 2x4s or plywood. The
center is clamped and the ends are gently
raised on 2x4 blocks.
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REPLACING SCREENING IN WOOD FRAMES
- To remove the old screening, pry off the
screen molding, starting in the center of a
strip and working toward the ends. Try not
to break it.
- Your local retailer can help you decide
what type of new screening to use. For
general household screening, you need a mesh
of 18" x 14" or finer (these are the stand
counts in each direction, per inch).
- With wooden window and door screens, it
is important to stretch the screen fabric
drum-tight for a neat and long-lasting job.
For the wedge method of stretching, you'll
need some 1x2 stock in a length slightly
wider than the window or door and some 1x4
stock from which to saw out the wedges.
- Cut your new screening at least 1'
longer and 1' wider than the unit to be
recovered.
- Staple the screening across the top edge
(Fig. 4). Then install the 1x2 cleats with
the bottom cleat nailed to a bench or other
flat surface. Roll the screening over it,
then nail on the top cleat (Fig. 5).
- Insert the wedges between the cleats and
screen frame, tapping the wedges in until
the screen has been pulled taut. Fig. 6
shows the procedure.
- Staple the screening at the bottom, then
along the sides. Put a staple in every few
inches (Fig. 7).
- Snip off any excess screening, and use
brads to refit the screen moldings.
Countersink the brads and fill the holes
with wood putty.
- The cleat-and-wedge method works well
with window screens and halves of doors, but
there's a better method of stretching screen
material on larger units, such as doors.
You'll need a pair of sawhorses with two
2x4s about the same length as the screen
placed across them (or use a sheet of
plywood). Place the stripped fame on the
boards, holding the center with C-clamps.
Then lift each end and insert short 2x4
blocks to bow them (Fig. 8). Bowing needs to
be done slowly and gently to keep from
snapping the frame.
- Now staple the screen in place tightly,
starting at the center brace. Remove the 2x4
blocks and the screen will be quite taut as
you replace the screen moldings.
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STEP 3
FIG. 9 - To replace screening in a metal
frame, carefully pry out the splines with a
screwdriver that's slightly smaller than the
spline.
FIG. 10 - Cut the screening to the
exterior frame size. |
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REPLACING SCREENING IN METAL FRAMES
- Aluminum screens or screen doors require
a different technique.
- Without kinking the metal frame, remove
the splines that hold the old screen in
place (Fig. 9). Check to see if new splines
are needed. For replacement, vinyl splining
is excellent. It comes in rolls of various
widths.
- Use a square to make sure the frame is
still in decent shape. Reshape it if not.
- Cut new screening to the frame's outside
measurements (Fig. 10).
- Next, force the screen's edges into the
channel on the top and one side using the
convex-edged wheel of a spline or screen
installation tool (Fig. 11). These tools are
available with different-width rollers–use
one that matches the channels in your screen
frame. Use short strokes for the best
results. A putty knife will work, too.
- With a sharp utility knife, cut the
screening to fit the two remaining sides.
Use the outside edge of the retaining
channel as a guide. Use the spline tool to
roll the screening into the remaining
grooves.
- Use the concave-edged wheel of the
spline tool to roll the retaining strips or
splines into the channels (Fig. 12). As
before, make short strokes. As the spline
goes in, it will pull the screening taut. To
complete the installation, cut off any
excess screening around all four sides.
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STEP 4
FIG. 11 - Roll the screening down into
the channel using the convex wheel of the spline
tool.
FIG. 12 - Roll the spline into the
channels with the concave wheel of the spline
tool.

FIG. 13 - Screws and dowels are useful where
the outside layer of wood has been weakened,
while mending plates go on simply and quickly. |
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FRAME REPAIRS
- Screen frame repairs are easiest to make
on wooden screen doors and windows. You may
need wood glue, dowels, corrugated or
chevron fasteners, mending plates and wood
screws, depending on the condition of the
frame. The fasteners work best on
mitered-corner screen frames.
- If the joint is slightly loosened but
the material is intact, open it up enough to
apply wood glue. Use a glue that's suited
for outdoor exposure (ask your retailer).
- Along with re-gluing, you may want to
install a mending plate of the proper size.
Flat and angled plates are available in many
sizes; use the largest size that fits
without causing problems. Secure the plates
with wood screws, which are often included.
Make sure the screws don't come through the
back of the frame.
- For making a simple repair at a slightly
damaged corner, you have two choices. You
can use a wood screw from the undamaged edge
or a dowel from either edge (with glue).
Drill and countersink for the wood screw,
using as large a size as practical. A 2-1/2"
No. 10 screw is probably the smallest screw
that's strong enough to last. Fill the
countersink hole with putty.
- For a dowel, drill for at least a 3/8"
diameter dowel. A 1/2" dowel is even better.
Dowels need to be slightly undersized for
their holes with a tap fit. Take care to see
that the dowel runs on into undamaged wood.
- Coat the dowel with glue and tap it into
the hole.
- With dowel and wood screw repairs, the
holes should extend into both pieces of the
frame. If the frame shows signs of twisting,
you'll need to use two slightly smaller
dowels or two wood screws.
- Fig. 13 shows four types of screen
corner repairs using a wood screw, dowel and
two types of mending plates.
- Aluminum frame repairs are limited to
rebracing of corners. Or you can get
extruded metal frame stock and make new
screens. A cross-brace kit is also
available, if needed, with turnbuckles and
clamps to draw a sagging screen door back
into square and hold it there.
- For frame or corner repairs, check the
squareness of the frame, then use mending
plates and sheet metal screws to make
repairs or to reinforce those corners. Be
sure that the mending plates you use are the
same material as the frame. This will help
prevent corrosive electrolysis between
dissimilar metals.
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STEP 5 - PAINTING SCREENS
- In most cases, only wood-framed screens
ever need painting. Choose the paint to
match the window frames. Select painting
tools that are suited for use on small
surfaces. If you have the old screening off
and find that the frame needs painting, do
it while the screen is off.
- On wood screens, remove the old, torn
screening as the paint coat under the
molding and screen provides protection. Make
sure the coating is light, though, so the
molding fits on replacement.
- Don't try painting screen mesh. If your
screens have galvanized screen mesh, replace
them if they rust. Painting aluminum or
fiberglass screening is only a waste of time
and paint.
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STEP 6
FIG. 14 - Sometimes, simply spraying
screens with water will clean them sufficiently;
other times, scrubbing with a brush and
detergent is needed. |
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CLEANING SCREENS
- To clean screens, first try vacuuming
them while installed. An upholstery nozzle
usually does the trick.
- In some cases, airborne dirt cannot be
removed simply by vacuuming. Then the
screens must be taken off and washed. With
luck, a hard spray from a garden hose will
do the job (Fig. 14). In other cases, you'll
need to scrub the screens. Do this with a
stiff-bristled brush and a mild detergent
solution, and finish by rinsing with the
hose.
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© 2007 Magnoliametal.com Magnolia
Metal & Plastic Products, Inc. - Vicksburg, MS All Rights
Reserved.
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