What 50°C Does to Aluminium Windows on Site
What 50°C does to aluminium
windows on site has ceased being a theoretical question in India. This is the
reality on many sites during peak summer, every day. And at 45–50°C, aluminium windows are no longer passive elements. They react. How they respond is
entirely based on how the system was designed, fabricated, and installed.
We’ve watched as
this dynamic plays out across projects at GREFET. Summer doesn’t create problems.
It exposes them.
What 50o does to Aluminium
Profiles
Aluminium expands
when heated. That part is basic physics. What most projects fail to grasp is
just how much this expansion means at scale.
At 50°C:
- Profiles expand lengthwise and laterally
- Sections such as the latter, when poorly designed begin to bind within frames
- Tight tolerances disappear fast
That leads to
shutters feeling tight, scraping or stopping their smooth sliding when it comes
to non-system or improvised windows. In a sound system, expansion has already
been dealt with via profile geometry, clearances and joint design.
What Does 50°C Do to Hardware and
Moving Parts?
Under extreme heat,
hardware is often the first to complain.
Issues of common sites
during peak summer:
- Hinges and rollers developing resistance
- Locks going out of alignment
- Sliding systems losing glide smoothness
This isn’t even a
hardware brand issue. It’s a system problem. If you haven’t accounted for
thermal movement as part of load paths and tolerances, hardware absorbs those
stresses.
Gaskets and Seals: What 50°C Does to
Them
Gaskets do the heavy
lifting in terms of performance; they just don’t get as much recognition. Heat
is their biggest enemy.
Under sustained
high temperatures:
- Low-grade gaskets harden or shrink
- Air-tightness drops
- Sudden summer storms can make water-tightness a hit-or-miss proposition
High insulation is
designed around gasket performance at extreme temperature, not just room
conditions.
What 50°C Tells Us About Installation
Quality
Summer heat
amplifies installation errors.
At high
temperatures:
- Tensioning frames too tightly can transmit stress into the structure
- Absence of expansion gaps means frame distortion
- Joints that are over-foamed or packed tightly, on the other hand will break or deform
Good systems let the
window move independent of the building. Poor installations make the window
battle the structure.
The Effect of 50°C on Glass and Glazing
Interfaces
Glass itself can
handle heat. The interface often can’t.
Problems
typically show up as:
- Stress on glazing beads
- Sealant failure around glass edges
- Noise or vibration upon rapid temperature change
This is how a system
should be designed to be one assembly. The performance of glass is contingent
upon the manner in which the frame supports it when subjected to thermal
stress.
Why Summer Is the Ultimate Test of
Window Design
Everything looks
good in winter, almost. In summer, nothing hides.
At 50°C,
aluminium windows either:
- Continue operating quietly, or
- Raise your voice with noise, resistance, leakage and complaints
That difference is
not accidental. It’s designed.
The GREFET View
At GREFET, we create system aluminium windows keeping Indian site conditions like extreme summer heat in mind. The system incorporates thermal movement, gasket behaviour, hardware loads and installation realities from day one. Because correct window design, construction, and installation can make 50°C just another day on site.

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