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the hinges seems OK to be honest. they move freely and free of rustHave you checked the hinge is not busted?
It is the small plastic slider where the metal bars pivot that usually splits and so the hinge does not fold correctly.
The bay window is sagging, or has been fitted in that position, my guess its a bit of both, you have much bigger issues than what you think
Lets start with the basics - the side opener, that should technically have 90° corners, the glass WILL HAVE been cut to have 90° corners also, the rectangular glass should fit nicely into a rectangular frame, it has not, the reason you have that gap is because the whole side window is sagging or has been fitted in that position, the opener although fixed to the frame via hinges is free to do what it likes in terms of its position, the outer frame has sagged but the opener doesn't sag with it, it floats
Check for cracks in the plaster below each side window assuming its the same on the other side, check for cracks outside the 'barrel' meets the house. This is jumping out to me that jacking poles haven't been fitted to the downstairs bay so it supports the upstairs, can you take a picture from outside of both bays stood back from the front and the side.
How long has this been fitted, is the company still trading, is the bay still under the 10 year guarantee?
The hinges will be fine, the opener is effectively a seperate entity only held in on hinges so if the frame moves and bends out of shape the opener stays in its original position hence you have daylight, the opener frame hasn't moved with the main frame
Yes, its not right but it might help close the gap, you've basically got to toe and heel the opener downwards, toe and heel is a method of jacking openers like this AND doors up to stop them rubbing along the bottom which they will with their own weight, your in a strange position that you NEED to force the frame down instead of up, trying to describe how to toe and heel though is like trying to explain the offside rule to a woman, near on impossible
Yes, its not right but it might help close the gap, you've basically got to toe and heel the opener downwards, toe and heel is a method of jacking openers like this AND doors up to stop them rubbing along the bottom which they will with their own weight, your in a strange position that you NEED to force the frame down instead of up, trying to describe how to toe and heel though is like trying to explain the offside rule to a woman, near on impossible
As Crank said how old are the windows?
Your outside pic is small and far away, We need several from the outside. Front on side on etc
Like Crank I'm thinking your bay is dropping/pulling away from the house!
As Crank said how old are the windows?
Your outside pic is small and far away, We need several from the outside. Front on side on etc
Like Crank I'm thinking your bay is dropping/pulling away from the house!