Most windows close. Very few actually seal. In brochures and showrooms, that difference is invisible. On site, and particularly after the first monsoon or during peak summer, it’s a painful reality. At GREFET, the difference between a window that closes and one that seals is at the heart of what we consider aluminium windows to be about. Closing is mechanical. Sealing is engineered.

Closing Is an Action. Sealing Is a Result.

A self-closing window does nothing but close. When closed, a sealed window provides a controlled barrier against air, water, noise and dust. The difference between the two is not effort or force. It’s design logic.

A sealing window depends on:

  • Consistent gasket compression
  • Pressure-balanced profiles
  • Accurate sash alignment
  • Hardware that “pulls”, not simply locks

Without them working together, a closed window is nothing but one surface touching another.

Why Your Windows Don’t Close All The Way

The difference between a window that closes and one that seals turns out to be frequently about how the window was designed. In a lot of the Indian projects, sealing is an accessory. Something added later. Something adjusted on site.

Common reasons sealing fails:

  • Gaskets as fillers, not active parts
  • No defined compression zones
  • Sealing paths broken at corners
  • Hardware selected for its cost, not load or the geometry resting points on.

The window closes. The handle turns. But heat is uneven and there are holes.

Sealing Is About the Pressure, Not Thickness

A myth often repeated is that heavier profiles or thicker sections mean better sealing. They don’t. Pressure control does.

A properly sealed window manages:

  • Where pressure builds
  • Where it releases
  • How water is redirected
  • Why the air slows down and gets chaotic

We at GREFET create assemblies where the sealing takes place by design, not by regulation.

More Than Most People Know, Hardware Matters

Handles and locks are visible. What they do internally isn’t.

Hardware is required to, in a sealing window:

  • Draw the sash evenly into the frame
  • Maintain alignment over repeated use
  • We distribute load, not consolidate it

But if the hard-ware merely closes the window, that sealing will always be a question of strength. And force fades over time.

Installation is the Sealing Challenge!

While the system maybe well designed, it can fail if installation doesn’t respect seal logic.

Commonly repeated mistakes during installation we see often:

  • Frames installed out of square
  • Over-tightening that distorts profiles
  • Improvised shimming
  • Drainage paths blocked or altered

It’s really important to be make sure that a window is well-behaved when it is installed. There’s no workaround for that.

What This Means in Real Life

The difference between a window that closes and one that seals appears gradually, then all at once.

  • Noise creeps in
  • Water finds a path
  • Dust settles where it shouldn’t
  • Hardware needs constant correction

At GREFET we manufacture aluminium window profiles to perfectly seal, not just close well. Simply because in Indian conditions, the performance is not established on day one. It’s finally proved after years of pressure. Sealing a window is not, after all, louder as marketing. It’s quieter in real life.

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