Glossary of Terms
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
A
Active: In paired or double doors,
the hinged door leaf which is primarily operable.
Affidavit Label: For fire-rated doors, a label on a door
product on which the manufacturer, not an independent laboratory,
states that the door meets a type or types of test criteria.
Air Infiltration: Air passing through a door system when
the door is under pressure, usually from wind.
Annealed Glass: Regular glass which has not been heat
strengthened or tempered. Most window glass is annealed.
Astragal: The post-type fitting on the latch-side edge
of one of a set of paired or double doors, which covers the
margin between doors when they are closed, and which houses
or contains the weatherstrip.
B
Backset: For locating a machined
hole, recess, or mortise, the distance from an edge or surface
to the center or edge of the recess, hole or mortise.
Ball-bearing Hinge: A heavier-duty hinge than the standard
hinge, with bearings supporting the pivots. Ball-bearing hinges
are usually used for heavy doors that will be in commercial
or industrial use.
Barbed: An adjective that describes the feature of a
part which inserts into a slot, and which has surface features
that enable it to stay firmly inserted into the slot.
Boot: A term used for the rubber part at the bottom or
top end of an astragal, which beds the astragal end and seals
between the end and the door frame or sill.
Boss, Screw Boss: A feature of a part which enables the
fastening of a screw into the feature, thereby allowing assembly
of the part with another. Screw bosses are common features of
molded plastic lite frames and extruded aluminum door sills.
Box-Framed: In door and sidelite assemblies, a term used
to differentiate door and sidelite units which are first framed
as separate units, with heads and sills separate and the width
of the door or sidelite panels. Box-framed doors are joined
to box-framed sidelites.
Brad: A small nail with a small head, usually used to
fasten small trim and moldings.
Brickmould: A molding, used to trim the outside edge
of a door frame. Brickmould is most often applied to prehung
units.
Buck: A term usually used in masonry construction to
describe a door frame or a subframe in a masonry opening, around
which a steel door frame wraps and is fastened.
Butt: A type of hinge commonly used to assemble doors.
Butt hinges are often referred to as simply butts.
Butyl: An organic compound, used in the door business
as a sealant. It is naturally black, and is heated and pumped
through nozzles, or pumped cold.
back to top
C
Came, Caming: Formed metal stripping,
usually made of brass or zinc plated steel, used between cut-glass
pieces to assemble the pieces into a decorative glass panel.
Caming is soldered at joints to bond the glass assembly together.
Carpet Shim: A spacer block used under a door sill to
raise the sill an appropriate amount if carpet is used, so the
door panel clears the carpet when opened.
Casing: A horizontal or vertical molding, which accents
or trims edges of doors and windows to the surrounding walls.
Casing also covers or accents intermediate posts.
Caulking: Sealant which is usually extruded or troweled
into a recess or joint, to seal against air and water leakage
through the joint.
Clad: Provided with a facing or jacket which works as
a protection against weather, and provides a finished appearance.
Cladding may be painted metal, plastic, or a heavy coating applied
by the manufacturer.
Clear Jambs: Natural wood door frames, without paint
or primer applied, and which appears to be made of full-length
pieces of stock, without joints or knots.
Closed-Cell Foam: Sponge-like material, usually used
in gaskets and weatherstripping, which compresses into joints,
but absorbs little water.
Closer Block: An inside reinforcement, usually placed
across the top edge of a door, to enable firm fastening of self-closing
hardware to the door.
Continuous Sill: A sill used for a type of door and sidelite
unit in which the unit has full width top and bottom frame parts,
and an internal post or posts separating sidelites from the
door panel.
Core: The center section or part of a door or door part.
Corner Plug, Corner Seal Pad: A small part, usually made
of resilient material, used to seal water which gets beyond
the bottom ends of weatherstrip in doors, from getting between
the door edge and the jambs, adjacent to the bottom gasket.
Cove Molding: A small molded wood lineal piece, usually
formed with a scooped face, used to trim and fasten a panel
of some type into a frame.
Crossbore: A large through-hole, near the edge of a door
panel, usually 2-1/8 inch in diameter, which houses a cylinder
lockset or deadbolt latch.
Cylinder Lock, Cylindrical Lock: Lock hardware which
mounts into a door which has been prepared with a bored hole
or holes through the face, and into the edge.
back to top
D
Dado: A machined or sawn groove,
across the width of a part.
Deadbolt: A latch used to secure a door closed, the latch
being driven from the door into a receiver in the jamb or frame.
Deflection: The distance a door has moved away from its
closed and latched position, usually measured at the top unsupported
latch-side corner. Deflection may be caused by wind pressure
or heat. Deflection is temporary. The door returns to position
when the force is removed.
Desiccant: Moisture absorbing material used inside the
spacer in an insulated glass assembly, so as to control moisture
levels and prevent moisture from frosting or condensing on the
inside glass surfaces of the insulated unit.
Doorlite: An assembly of frame and glass panel, which
when fitted to a door in a formed or cut-out hole, creates a
door with a glass opening.
Double-Glazed: Outfitted with two panes of glass with
a sealed airspace between.
Drip Strip: In exterior doors, a fitting used across
the outside face of the door adjacent to the bottom edge, to
divert cascading rain away from the door bottom edge and away
from the door/sill joint.
Drywall Opening: A rectangular opening in a wall, usually
an interior wall, prepared to the size necessary to receive
a pre-hung assembly.
DSB Glass: A term no longer used in the glass business,
which meant "Double Strength, 'B' quality." DSB glass when furnished
by Therma-Tru in doors, is 1/8-inch thick, single pane and not
insulated.
Dummy Cylinder: A lock without a latch, typically used
for the passive door panel of a double door unit, so that the
hardware appears equal to that used on the active panel.
back to top
E
Edge Bore: The hole bored through
the edge of a door to allow the latch to pass through, into
the strike.
Electric Strike: A mechanism which allows a switch to
open the latch of a door.
End Seal Pad: A closed-cell foam piece, about 1/16-inch
thick, in the shape of a sill profile, fastened between the
sill and the jamb to seal the joint.
Escutcheon: A stamped decorative plate, usually circular
to trim the shaft of a door knob or deadbolt latch, to trim
the opening where the shaft or latch adjoins the face of a door.
Etched Glass: Glass used for doorlites on which a decorative
pattern is engraved by means of chemical action or mechanical
sand-blasting.
Extension Unit: A framed fixed door panel, with a full-sized
lite of glass, field-installed or shop-installed adjacent to
a two-panel patio door, to make the door unit into a three-panel
door.
back to top
F
Faceplate: The plated or solid metal
trim piece, usually about 1 x 2-1/4 inches, housed flush into
the edge of a door, through which projects the latch of a passage
lock or deadbolt.
Finger Joint: A way of joining short sections of board
stock together, end to end to make longer stock. Door and frame
parts are often made using finger-jointed pine stock.
Fire Door: A door of a construction type which has been
tested to contain the spread of fire from one room or occupancy
area to another. Fire doors are listed and labeled to show their
ratings in terms of time, i.e., 20-Minute, 90-Minute, etc.
Flush-Glazed: A type of glazed door which has its glass
perimeter moldings flush with or set down from the face of the
surrounding door.
Foam: Rigid or flexible plastic, light in weight and
cellular in structure, used in door construction. Rigid foam
is used as the insulating and binding core for doors. Flexible
foam is sometimes used as gasket.
Foot Bolt: A steel pin housed in a door bottom edge or
astragal, with a latch mechanism, which can be driven down to
project into a receiver socket or hole in the floor or threshold,
to better secure the door when closed.
Frame: In door assemblies, the perimeter members at the
top and sides, to which the door is hinged and latched. See
jamb.
back to top
G
Gain: A notch across the end of a
board or wood part.
Galvanized: An adjective used to describe steel which
has been zinc-coated. Galvanized steel is resistant to corrosion.
Gasket: A strip of flexible material which in an assembly
of parts, prevents air and water from penetrating or passing
through joints between parts.
Glazing: The elastic material used to seal glass to a
surrounding frame.
Grille: For doors with glass lites or inserts, a removable
face-mounted assembly of thin wood or plastic pieces, which
when in place, gives the lite or insert a patterned multi-pane
look.
Grooved Glass: Glass which has been decorated with abrasively-routed
recesses. Grooving can give a single piece of glass a multi-paned
look.
back to top
H
Handing: A term which describes or
determines the direction of swing of a door when opening.
Head Bolt: A steel pin housed in a door top edge or astragal.
See foot bolt. Head, Head Jamb: The horizontal top frame member
of a door assembly.
Hinge: An assembly of metal plates and a cylindrical
metal pin, which when fastened to a door edge and to a door
frame, allow the door to swing or rotate in its frame.
Hinge Stile: The full-length vertical edge of a door,
at the side or edge of the door which fastens to its frame with
hinges.
Horned Sill: A sill which has been coped or cut in such
a way at its ends, so that the sill projects across the outside
face of the bottoms of door jambs, allowing the bottom ends
of the brickmold pieces to butt and join to the top of the sill.
back to top
I
IG Unit: Abbreviation for insulated
glass unit.
Inactive: A term for a door panel fixed in its frame.
Inactive door panels are not hinged and are not operable.
I
nsulated Glass, Insulating Glass: A glass assembly of
multiple full-lite pieces, separated by a perimeter spacer and
sealed as a unit. Insulated glass in residential doors is usually
made with two thicknesses of 1/8-inch glass, separated by an
airspace
up to 3/4-inch thick.
Inswing: A term used to describe an exterior entry door
unit for which, when the hinged door panel is opened, the panel
swings into the building.
back to top
J
Jamb: A vertical perimeter frame
part of a door system.
Jamb Jack: A fastener device for fixing a door frame
to a wall structure, which allows the space or margin between
the frame and the structure opening, to be varied by turning
the fastener screw.
Jamb Stop: In exterior door frames, the molded-in rebate
surface of a frame member against which door panels close and
seal.
J-channel: Installed or built-in to the side of a door, this channel is designed to accommodate the ends of siding pieces to provide a finished appearance.
back to top
K
Kerf: A thin slot cut into a part
with a molder or saw blade. Weatherstrip is inserted into kerfs
cut into door jambs.
King Stud: In a wood-framed rough opening, the stud which
runs full height from floor plate to ceiling plate, against
which trimmer stud attaches.
Knuckle: The feature of a hinge where the hinge leaf
is cut for two or three projections which wrap and form a barrel
or socket for the hinge pin.
back to top
L
Laminate: A thin face of wood or
plastic, adhesively bonded to a core or substrate, which makes
up the decorative, wear or weatherable surface of the part.
Latch: A moveable, usually spring-loaded pin or bolt,
which is part of a lock mechanism, and engages a socket or clip
on a door jamb, retaining the door closed.
Leaf: A term which can apply to a door or hinge and which
defines a part of the assembly which can swing on a pivot. Butt
hinges have two leaves.
Lite: An assembly of glass and a surrounding frame, which
is assembled to a door, or is integrally built into the door
at the factory.
Lock Block: A rectangular block of wood or other solid
material, placed inside a door assembly at the lock side edge,
which reinforces the assembly when the lock hardware is installed.
Lock Bore: For cylindrical locksets, the large through
hole, usually 2-1/8-inches in diameter, bored near the door
panel's lock edge, into which the lock mechanism is placed and
installed.
Lock Stile: In insulated door assemblies, the full-length
part, usually wood, which makes up the lock edge of the door
panel. In wood stile and rail doors, the full length wood piece,
4 to 6-inches wide, at the lock edge of the door.
Low-E Glass: Glass which has been factory coated with
a thin layer of material, nearly clear, which acts to absorb
and reflect heat and light energy.
LVL: Abbreviation for laminated veneer lumber. LVL is
a manufactured wood product, in which veneer layers are adhesively
bonded into a layup of multiple thicknesses. LVL is made to
specified strengths and is used for structural purposes.
back to top
M
Miter: An angled cut across the end
of a lineal part, usually done to join with a similarly-cut
part at a corner.
Mortise: A recess cut into the surface or edge of a part,
usually for the purpose of housing hardware such as hinges and
lock parts.
Mortise-Type Lock: A lockset which usually has a rectangular-shaped
mechanism, which is housed into a deep recess cut into the edge
of a door.
Mull: A short term for mullion. Used occasionally as
a verb to describe the joining of two door units together, or
the joining of a door to a sidelite unit.
Mulled: An adjective describing a door and sidelite unit
which has been made up by edge-joining two framed units together.
Mullion: A post or divider which runs from sill to frame
top in a multi-panel door, door, or door and sidelite assembly.
In stile and rail doors, the vertical wood parts which separate
panels.
Multiple Extension Unit: In patio door assemblies, a
fixed door panel in a separate frame, edge-joined to a patio
door unit to add another glass panel to the installation.
Muntins: In glazed lite assemblies, thin vertical and
horizontal divider bars, which give the lite a multi-paned look.
Muntins may be part of lite frames, and on the outside surface
of the glass, or assembled between glass in insulated glass
units.
back to top
N
Nailing Fin: A feature of some windows
and patio doors which permits installation and fastening to
a rough opening by nails or screws driven through the fin at
the top and side edges of the unit, into the surrounding frame
of the opening.
NFRC: Initials for National Fenestration Ratings Council,
an industry association which sets standards for testing, rating,
and labeling doors and windows with heat transmission and energy
information.
Night Latch: A lever or knob-actuated bolt for fastening
a door more securely at night.
Nosing: An edge piece, usually molded with a rounded
face or corner, which runs the length of an assembly. Oak adjustable
sills have a nosing part along the floor line at the inside
edges.
NRP Hinge: An abbreviation for a hinge with a non-removable
pivot pin. NRP hinges are used when exterior doors swing out,
as a security feature. The fixed pins make it impossible to
remove a door by driving out pivot pins.
back to top
O
Open-Cell Foam: A foam material which
has passageways between cells. Open-cell foam will absorb and
retain water, because the water will penetrate deeply inside
the foam.
Outswing: An exterior door assembly in which the door
panel swings outside the building.
back to top
P
Panic-proof Lock: A lock and latch
device which permits a door to be opened outward by pressure
being applied to a bar mounted across the inside face of the
door.
Passage Lock: A lockset which will retain a door closed,
but which cannot be locked.
Passive: In a double or two-panel door assembly, the
door which usually remains closed and fixed by bolts at top
and bottom. The other door panel is used for regular passage.
Plant: A decorative molding applied to the surface of
a flush door, to give the appearance of a raised-molding design.
Plates: In residential wood-frame construction, the horizontal
parts of a wall frame running atop the subfloor, and at the
ceiling atop the stud ends, on which framing from above bears.
PVC: Abbreviation for polyvinyl chloride, a plastic material
used to make molded or extruded parts.
back to top
R
R-Value: A number which describes
in relative terms, the ability of a material or assembly to
resist the flow or transmittance of heat. Assemblies or materials
with high R-values are better insulators than those with lower
R-values.
Rabbet, Rebate: A rectangular recess cut or formed along
the long edge of a part, usually a wood part.
Rail: In insulated door panels, the part, made of wood
or a composite material, which runs inside the assembly, across
the top and bottom ends, and makes up the top or bottom edge.
In stile and rail doors, horizontal pieces at top and bottom
edges, and at intermediate points, which connect and frame between
the stiles.
Ramp: In a sill or threshold, the horizontal face which
is sloped.
Rebate: See rabbet.
Reveal: The offset or margin between edges of parts.
Riser: A term which describes the part of an adjustable
sill which can be moved up or down by turning adjusting screws.
Riveted-Pin Hinge: See NRP hinge.
Rough Opening: A structurally-framed opening in a wall
which receives a door unit or window.
back to top
S
Saddle: In adjustable sills, another
term for riser. Also, a shop-applied label applied around the
corner or edge of a door, which provides identification and
installation instructions.
Safety Glass: Glass which when broken,
shatters into small pieces without sharp edges.
Score: A line (as
a scratch or incision) made with or as if with a sharp instrument.
Screen Track: A feature of a door sill or frame head
which provides a housing and runner for rollers, to allow a
screen panel to slide from side to side in the door. Scribe:
A mark for a cut which has been made by using a template or
pattern.
Sealant: Elastic material pumped or troweled into a joint
to prevent water penetration.
Self-Cased: A steel frame for
which the edge detail finishes to the surrounding wall, without
the need for additional applied casing molding.
Self-Locating Hinge: A hinge with indexing or locating
tabs to aid in exact placement against a door edge.
Shim: A thin piece of material used between parts of
an assembly, to change and fix the distance between parts, when
parts are fastened.
Sidelite: A fixed narrow panel, installed next to a door
panel, for decorative purposes. Sidelites almost always contain
glass lites.
Sill Saddle: See riser.
Slide Bolt: The part of an astragal assembly which, by
means of moving latches at tops and bottoms of astragals, places
bolts into frame heads and sills, for fixing passive door panels
closed.
Smoke & Draft Door: Where building codes define use,
a fire door which has been rated for 20-minutes fire resistance,
and which does not need test certification as having passed
the hose stream portion of the fire test.
Spacer, Glass Spacer: A lineal part with rectangular
cross section, running along the perimeter edges, between the
glass pieces of an insulating glass unit.
STC: Abbreviation for sound transmission coefficient.
A value which describes in relative terms the ability of a door
to dampen the passage of noise. Doors with higher STC values
permit less noise to pass through.
Stile: In insulated door panels, the full-length parts,
usually wood, which make up the long edges. In stile and rail
doors, the vertical edge parts.
Strike: A metal part with a hole or recess for receiving
a door latch, also with a curved or ramped face so a spring-loaded
latch contacts it when closing. Strikes are fit into mortises
in door jambs or mullions, and screw-fastened.
Style: A number or name defining a door design or configuration.
Subfloor: The concrete or wood floor surface lying under
the finished floor. Prehung door assemblies are installed atop
the subfloor.
Substrate: The base or core material in an assembly of
parts. In sills, the full length wood or composite part of the
sill, visible only from the bottom side, or ends.
back to top
T
Tempered Glass: Glass sheet which
has been strengthened by heat processing. Tempered glass when
broken, shatters into small pieces without sharp edges. See
safety glass.
Template: A pattern or jig used to machine-cut a precise
hole or recess into a door or frame part.
Thermal Break: A feature of a door or frame assembly
which separates metal or glass exposed to outside temperatures,
from coming into contact and transmitting heat to or from inside-exposed
parts.
Threshold: Another term for sill. The horizontal part
of a door assembly, fixed under the door panel and bearing on
the floor.
Tinted Glass: Glass made with a green, gray or bronze
tint, so as to reduce light transmittance.
TPE: Abbreviation for thermoplastic elastomer. TPEs are
used to make weatherstripping and gasketing parts.
Transom: A framed glass assembly mounted atop a door
assembly. Transoms are rectangular in shape or have curved or
arched tops. One design of a curved top transom has the shape
of a half-ellipse.
Transport Clip: A steel piece used to temporarily fasten
a prehung door assembly closed for handling and shipping, which
maintains the door panel's proper position in the frame.
Trimmer Stud: In a wood-framed rough opening, the stud
or framing member which runs vertically from the subfloor to
and supporting the structural header member, into which a door
frame is fastened.
Triple-Glazed: An insulated glass assembly made of three
thicknesses of glass, with air spaces between the outer and
inner thicknesses.
back to top
U
U-Value: A number which describes
in specific terms, the ability of a material or assembly to
transmit heat from outside to inside surfaces. Assemblies with
lower U-values transmit less heat than those with higher values.
SeeR-value. A U-value is the inverse of an R-value.
Urethane: A plastic material made by reacting two polymers.
A urethane part will burn, but it will not melt.
Veneer: A thin film or facing, adhesively
bonded to a core or substrate, which makes up the exposed and
decorative face of an assembly.
back to top
W
Warp: A permanent curvature or deviation
from straightness, which can be induced in a part or assembly
by a load or force, or by exposure to heat or moisture.
Water Penetration: The unwanted passage of water through
a door system.
Wired Glass: Glass made for use in fire doors, which
has embedded wires which bind the glass, and permit the glass
to remain monolithic when exposed to fire.
Y
Yellow Zinc Dichromate: A brass-look
plating to steel parts, which is highly corrosion-resistant.
back to top