Any ideas what happened.
Would this be a good opportunity to replace the door as the wooden frame
is rotting at the bottom.
Is it likely the other panes will go in the same way if not is it
relatively cheap to replace a 190x80cm pane in a sliding unit.
Was it the fixed door or the moving one? It might be subsidence and
the fixed door coming under slowly increasing stress and the
eventually shattering. if it's the moving door then it can't be that
becuase it would get stiff first.
i've seen this happe nat work and it is very alarmning - a big bang
and then a pile of granules of glass. Sometimes they stay intact but
turn to a mosaic of small fragments.
Robert
Known phenomenon with toughened glass. Check out
http://www.glassonweb.com/articles/article/330/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spontaneous_glass_breakage
--
Tony Bryer, 'Software to build on' from Greentram
www.superbeam.co.uk www.superbeam.com www.greentram.com
> Any ideas what happened.
If it's toughened glass this just sometimes happens - same as it does with
toughened glass once used on cars.
Insurance should cover it.
--
*Why is the word abbreviation so long?
Dave Plowman da...@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
Yes that looks about right. Although I guess the window is the same age
as the house ~20 years, a bit older than expected for this type of fault.
I saw that happen to a car window once. The door had been left open and
no-one was near it and nothing was touching it. The window just shattered all
of a sudden.
--
Clint Sharp
When I was a lad I saw that happen to a parked dustcart windscreen.
Nobody was near it and the crew were amazed at it shattering all of a
sudden. 'Course it might have had something to do with my mate's
unerring catapult aim.