Patio screen door stuck, torn, or off the track? Arizona's combination of UV, monsoon dust, and daily sliding wear kills patio screen doors faster than anywhere else in the country. In Mesa, we see the same failures over and over — and we've got the fix dialed in.
Downtown Mesa and West Mesa have older aluminum-frame screen doors from the 70s-80s. The frames are still solid — it's the screen mesh, rollers, and latch hardware that need replacement. Moreover, we re-screen in place rather than replacing the whole door ($85 vs $250+).
What We Repair
- Screen re-mesh — Remove old screen, install new fiberglass or pet-resistant mesh, re-spline the frame. $85 for standard sliding doors (up to 36"×80"). Additionally, we re-screen in place — no need to remove the door from the track.
- Roller replacement — Worn-out rollers make the door stick, jump, or drag. Additionally, we replace with sealed-bearing steel rollers that resist Arizona dust. $65 including adjustment.
- Handle and latch repair — Broken plastic handles, seized latches, or misaligned strike plates. $45 parts and labor. Additionally, we stock the most common Mesa builder-spec replacements.
- Track cleaning and adjustment — Dirt, debris, and bent track sections. Ultrasonic-clean the track, straighten bends, lubricate with dry silicone (not WD-40 — that attracts dust). $55.
- Full door replacement — When the frame is bent beyond repair. Furthermore, we measure, order, and install a new aluminum-frame sliding screen door. $175-$250 depending on size.
Why Arizona Destroys Screen Doors
UV degradation: Phoenix averages 299 sunny days per year. UV breaks down fiberglass screen mesh in 4-5 years — it becomes brittle, develops tiny cracks, and eventually tears at the slightest touch. West-facing patio doors fail 2× faster than east-facing.
Monsoon dust: Fine desert grit embeds in the roller track and acts like sandpaper every time you slide the door. Specifically, one monsoon season can grind a plastic roller flat. Sealed-bearing steel rollers are the fix — they cost $8 more and last 5× longer.
Daily use: A family of four slides a patio door 15-20 times per day. In fact, that's 6,000+ cycles per year. Builder-grade rollers are rated for 10,000 cycles — do the math.
Screen Mesh Options
| Mesh Type | Best For | Re-screen Price |
|---|---|---|
| Standard fiberglass | Budget, low-traffic | $85 |
| Phifer PetScreen | Dogs, cats, heavy use | $115 |
| SunTex 80% solar | West-facing, heat reduction | $125 |
| Stainless steel | Maximum durability | $155 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you fix my screen door today?
Standard repairs (roller, handle, re-screen with fiberglass) are same-day if booked before noon. Specialty mesh (PetScreen, solar, stainless) ships in 1-2 days — we'll schedule the install for when it arrives.
Should I repair or replace the whole door?
If the aluminum frame is straight and the corners are intact, repair. Specifically, for example, a re-screen ($85) + new rollers ($65) = $150 total, and the door works like new. Of course, if the frame is bowed, cracked at the corners, or the track is too damaged — replacement ($175-$250) is the better investment.
Do you match HOA screen requirements?
Yes. Typically, most Mesa HOAs specify charcoal or desert bronze mesh color. Furthermore, we stock both in all mesh types. Of course, if your HOA has a specific requirement, send us the spec and we'll confirm before we order.
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