Comment on They have a right to feel smug
Ephera@lemmy.ml 8 hours agoYou can still have the screen on the inside with these tiltable windows…
Comment on They have a right to feel smug
Ephera@lemmy.ml 8 hours agoYou can still have the screen on the inside with these tiltable windows…
idunnololz@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
I cant see how without needing to remove the screen each time. I probably need to see a picture.
Ephera@lemmy.ml 2 hours ago
I have an insect screen which can be glued to the inside like so:
Image
(There’s a white velcro strip already there, which you glue on before this step.)
But yeah, it isn’t a given that it fits there. I have an ancient window, where they didn’t use plastic or rubber yet, so they tried to seal the window by having it contact right where you’d glue the insect screen and then it obviously doesn’t fit in between (I tried 🫠).
BorgDrone@feddit.nl 6 hours ago
I have a removable screen with one of these windows. The window opens inwards, the screen basically clicks into the window frame from the inside and sits between the window itself and the frame. So the screen sits outside the window, but you can easily remove it from inside. You just open the window and pull the screen out of the window frame.
idunnololz@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
I see
Damage@feddit.it 3 hours ago
Oh there’s many options. My windows are tiltable, they have (electric) roller shutters and bug screens.
Most of my screens roll up to the top (I have a little chain connected to the mechanism to roll it up and down), but I also have two doors whose screens’ mechanism works horizontally, with a spring, it locks closed with magnets, when you release it from the magnets it rolls open by itself. It’s even got a little cable-chain-like thing on the top and bottom to hold the screen, guide the movement and remove the gap.
And it can be removed from its frame with a snap catch, if you need to have the maximum opening to move something large through the door.