lord mud of the flyes Posted Monday at 07:34 Share Posted Monday at 07:34 Hello again For those that remember my last post; I painted my door thanks. But now I want to fit a letter box to it. I want to make this door look as domestic as possible and look like any other front house door. So I would like the letter box to be the same. That is cut a whole in the middle of the door and fit some kind of letter box by means of welding or metal glue. I also want the mail to fall into a box if possible as opposed to the floor so people cant just knows though the whole or put something though they should'int So best ideas please? Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russell griffiths Posted Monday at 12:02 Share Posted Monday at 12:02 You won’t need to weld it or glue it. most letter boxes come in two parts an inner and an outer all you need to do is work out how to cut the hole. once that is done the inner and outer fix through the door with the supplied screws/ bolts. go and get the letter boxes of your choice and mark the door up. I don’t know what type of door you have so some pics might come in handy when trying to work out how to cut it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
saveasteading Posted Monday at 12:46 Share Posted Monday at 12:46 5 hours ago, lord mud of the flyes said: to fit a letter box to it. The metal doors i have worked with are cleverly designed to use minimal material. It is remarkable how little metal is used, and how thin the faces are (1mm or less) So I would expect the door to be very easy to cut to form openings, using a jig saw (or snips if you have the skill). The downside is that it then becomes floppy at the hole. There may be an infill of foam or mineral wool. That can help stiffness. So I would want the letter box to have substantial lips that mate to the face of the door, and then you glue and/or rivet. Glue would also keep the rain out. It will need a connecting sleeve too to close the void. The door may be flexible at this point so it would be preferable if the letter box outer parts were solidly linked to each other by the sleeve, When you do this, can we see progress photos please? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adrian Walker Posted Monday at 14:02 Share Posted Monday at 14:02 Unless you insulate a letter box you could lose up to £120 in heat loss every year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeGrahamT21 Posted Monday at 14:09 Share Posted Monday at 14:09 1 hour ago, saveasteading said: The metal doors i have worked with are cleverly designed to use minimal material. It is remarkable how little metal is used, and how thin the faces are (1mm or less) So I would expect the door to be very easy to cut to form openings, using a jig saw (or snips if you have the skill). The downside is that it then becomes floppy at the hole. There may be an infill of foam or mineral wool. That can help stiffness. So I would want the letter box to have substantial lips that mate to the face of the door, and then you glue and/or rivet. Glue would also keep the rain out. It will need a connecting sleeve too to close the void. The door may be flexible at this point so it would be preferable if the letter box outer parts were solidly linked to each other by the sleeve, When you do this, can we see progress photos please? @Pocster This looks like your kind of post! 🤣 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pocster Posted Monday at 16:30 Share Posted Monday at 16:30 2 hours ago, MikeGrahamT21 said: @Pocster This looks like your kind of post! 🤣 I have a seperate post box outside - saves letterbox in door issues . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Onoff Posted Monday at 16:33 Share Posted Monday at 16:33 2 minutes ago, Pocster said: I have a seperate post box outside - saves letterbox in door issues. Saves the captives calling for help through it as well... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pocster Posted Monday at 16:34 Share Posted Monday at 16:34 Just now, Onoff said: Saves the captives calling for help through it as well... True . But those gags are pretty effective anyway . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lord mud of the flyes Posted Wednesday at 01:01 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 01:01 On 13/01/2025 at 12:02, Russell griffiths said: You won’t need to weld it or glue it. most letter boxes come in two parts an inner and an outer all you need to do is work out how to cut the hole. once that is done the inner and outer fix through the door with the supplied screws/ bolts. go and get the letter boxes of your choice and mark the door up. I don’t know what type of door you have so some pics might come in handy when trying to work out how to cut it. The steel is about 2mm thick and way thinner then a normal wooden house door Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lord mud of the flyes Posted Wednesday at 01:06 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 01:06 On 13/01/2025 at 12:46, saveasteading said: The metal doors i have worked with are cleverly designed to use minimal material. It is remarkable how little metal is used, and how thin the faces are (1mm or less) So I would expect the door to be very easy to cut to form openings, using a jig saw (or snips if you have the skill). The downside is that it then becomes floppy at the hole. There may be an infill of foam or mineral wool. That can help stiffness. So I would want the letter box to have substantial lips that mate to the face of the door, and then you glue and/or rivet. Glue would also keep the rain out. It will need a connecting sleeve too to close the void. The door may be flexible at this point so it would be preferable if the letter box outer parts were solidly linked to each other by the sleeve, When you do this, can we see progress photos please? As above. i do not think that a standard letter box for a wooden door will fit due to the thickness of them. Image attached Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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