Breakage due to thermal stress is most common in large pieces of sealed insulating glass with heavy heat absorbing reflective coatings.
Storm door glass shattered.
Such incidents occur when the gaskets setting blocks or edge blocks in a metal window or curtain wall frame are missing or do not sufficiently cushion the glass against glass to metal contact caused by temperature or wind related movement.
The coating is usually applied to the number two surface the inside face of the outside lite.
I was there in seconds.
Glass doesn t just break on its own.
Pull the glass out and place it aside.
All storm doors have tempered glass and it will shattered if something even a small rock hits it.
Because of stormy weather the glass from your storm door may crack or shatter.
The window was in the process of crumbling to the ground i actually watched it fall.
The glass did not simply crack it shattered explosively.
This is the weird thing the shattered glass in the house and on the porch then started to jump around.
The reason tempered glass spontaneously shatters it might have a flaw in the edge or a scratch in the surface.
The breakage was never a crack that progressed into pieces of glass tinkling to the floor.
Because sliding glass door panes are tempered they re inherently prone to spontaneous shattering.
Maybe you would want to check into the cost of just the glass with a local glass company.
And while it s not common by any means it does happen and can take homeowners by surprise when it does.
That inclusion a tiny ball of metal made of nickel and sulfer growing over time.
A glass company could have done that or larson might have replaced the glass.
This is a very easy job that can be done in minutes.
To do so nudge a thin blade or a flathead screwdriver between the door frame and the retaining strip gently pry it from the top of the glass and work your way in the opposite direction.
I don t know of any company that will warranty the glass.
Loosen the two retainer strips holding the glass in the storm door before attempting to take the pane out.
And it s called an inclusion.
It seems like you could have kept the door if it wasn t broken and had the glass replaced in it.
Most often shattering will occur as a result of fluctuations in temperature.
The next minute it was fragmented into minute pieces and the noise of the shattering was very loud sometimes described as deafening.
The other reason is occasionally there s an impurity in the glass when it was melted from sand.
You will need no adhesive because the glass will be fixed in some clips and screws.