Hi all,
I’d appreciate some advice from people who know more about window/door installation than I do.
We had new REHAU Rio patio doors with sidelights fitted earlier this year by a small FENSA-registered company. We are getting very noticeable cold and draughts around the bottom of the frame/sill junction, especially now that the weather has turned colder.
After taking some thermal images, there is a very clear cold line exactly where the sill meets the frame. It’s a consistent pattern across the whole width. I’ve attached the thermal photos below.
I also looked underneath the exterior cill and it seems like the sill is resting directly on the brickwork with no insulation or thermal break. The installer told me:
My questions for the forum:
Any professional opinions or similar experiences would be really helpful before I decide how to proceed.
Thanks in advance.
I’d appreciate some advice from people who know more about window/door installation than I do.
We had new REHAU Rio patio doors with sidelights fitted earlier this year by a small FENSA-registered company. We are getting very noticeable cold and draughts around the bottom of the frame/sill junction, especially now that the weather has turned colder.
After taking some thermal images, there is a very clear cold line exactly where the sill meets the frame. It’s a consistent pattern across the whole width. I’ve attached the thermal photos below.
I also looked underneath the exterior cill and it seems like the sill is resting directly on the brickwork with no insulation or thermal break. The installer told me:
and also:“There’s only a 3–5 mm gap, we can’t insulate that, proper insulation isn’t required for small gaps.”
The floor is finished up to the frame, and the thermal camera shows the cold coming specifically through the frame/sill junction, not from below.“It’s your floor that’s cold, not the door.”
My questions for the forum:
- Is a sill resting directly on cold brickwork without any packers or insulation acceptable practice?
- Should a proper installation allow space (20–30 mm) for insulation or a thermal break under the sill?
- Would resealing or adding more foam internally achieve anything, or is this fundamentally a threshold installation problem?
- Is this something that FENSA would normally get involved with?
- Has anyone here had to escalate a similar issue under the Consumer Rights Act?
Any professional opinions or similar experiences would be really helpful before I decide how to proceed.
Thanks in advance.
Attachments
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cill from below showing no insulation and patchy silicone.jpeg384.2 KB · Views: 22 -
thermal imaging camera sill.jpeg81 KB · Views: 21 -
therma imaging sill 2.jpeg85.9 KB · Views: 21 -
thermal imaging bottom side 21.11.2025.jpeg89.6 KB · Views: 20 -
left side.jpeg388.6 KB · Views: 21 -
right side.jpeg304.5 KB · Views: 20 -
entire bottom.jpeg321.4 KB · Views: 22

