Homeowners want to know whether a door sweep attaches to the door face or the door bottom, what gap a sweep can close before the door needs adjustment, and why KC winters make a bad door sweep feel like a window left open. A website that explains door sweep installation earns the draft call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Door Sweep Installation in KC
Web Design for Door Sweep Installation Companies in Kansas City
Door sweep installation customers are KC homeowners who feel cold air entering at the bottom of the front or back door during winter, homeowners whose existing sweep has worn flat or torn after years of contact with the threshold, or homeowners who had a new exterior door installed and the installer left the door without a sweep on a threshold that has a gap. The central education is sweep type by door bottom and threshold configuration, gap coverage limit, and threshold coordination — three things that determine whether a door sweep seals the bottom or just drags across the floor without contacting the threshold. Sweep type: the two main configurations are door-face-mount (also called surface-mount or automatic door bottom) and door-bottom-slot; a surface-mount sweep screws to the interior face of the door near the bottom — the seal flap hangs below the door bottom and contacts the floor or threshold as the door closes; a door-bottom-slot sweep slides into a kerf or slot cut into the door bottom and is captured mechanically — this is standard on solid wood exterior doors where the kerf was cut at the mill; automatic door bottoms are spring-activated versions that retract when the door opens and drop when the door closes — these are the correct specification for a door threshold with a raised dam because a fixed sweep drags and wears on the dam edge; on KC exterior doors from before 1980, many have no kerf and no original sweep — a surface-mount with brush seal or rubber flap is the correct retrofit. Gap coverage: a standard door sweep covers a gap of 1/4 to 1/2 inch between the door bottom and the threshold or sill — this is the normal tolerance after door installation; a gap larger than 3/4 inch means either the door has sagged at the hinge side (common in KC homes where the door frame has racked slightly from seasonal wood movement), the threshold has dropped, or the door was installed short; a sweep cannot substitute for door adjustment — a 1-inch gap at the hinge corner and 1/4 inch at the latch corner is a hinge and door plumb problem, not a sweep size problem. Threshold coordination: the sweep and the threshold must work together — a threshold with an aluminum dam (raised seal ridge on top) requires a sweep that contacts the dam face, not the floor; a flat threshold requires a sweep that contacts the threshold surface; the KC standard residential configuration is a sloped aluminum threshold with a vinyl insert that the sweep presses against — the correct sweep for this is a door bottom with a vinyl or rubber bulb that compresses against the threshold insert. A door sweep website that explains sweep type by door and threshold, gap coverage limit, and how sweep and threshold work together earns the homeowner who wants the draft stopped on the first visit.
What homeowners research before door sweep installation
- Sweep type — surface-mount vs. door-bottom-slot, automatic door bottom for raised dam threshold
- Gap coverage — 1/4 to 1/2 inch standard, when door adjustment is needed before sweep
- Threshold coordination — dam vs. flat threshold, vinyl insert contact requirement
- KC older door retrofit — pre-1980 no-kerf doors, surface-mount with brush or rubber flap
- Door sag diagnosis — hinge-corner vs. latch-corner gap, racking vs. sweep problem
What your door sweep installation website would include
- Sweep type section — surface-mount vs. slot, automatic door bottom, when each is correct
- Gap coverage section — 1/4-1/2 inch limit, how to measure your gap, door adjustment threshold
- Threshold guide — dam vs. flat vs. vinyl-insert identification, sweep-to-threshold matching
- KC retrofit section — older door with no kerf, surface-mount installation method
- Door sag section — how to tell if gap is a sweep problem vs. door adjustment problem
- Quote form with door location, gap measurement, threshold type, door age, timeline
What clients say
“The threshold coordination section is the one that saves me the most time. Customers in Lee's Summit would buy a sweep at the hardware store and call me because it wouldn't stop the draft — they had a dam threshold and got a flat-contact sweep that rides over the dam and never contacts anything. After the section went up explaining that the sweep has to match the threshold type, customers stopped buying the wrong sweep and started describing their threshold when they called. The gap coverage section also helped — I used to show up to installs where the gap was 1.5 inches because the door had sagged and no sweep was going to fix that. Now customers know to measure first.”
— D. Ashby, exterior door and weatherization service, Lee's Summit, MO
Simple pricing
A door sweep site with sweep type section, gap coverage guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with threshold coordination, automatic door bottom content, and KC retrofit guide is $425–$750. One exterior door sweep installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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