glossary Glossary 4 min read

Operating force (AS 2047 windows/doors)

Operating force test under AS 2047 measures the force to open and close sliding sashes and hinged sashes. Caps usability; common coastal failure mode.

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Operating force under AS 2047:2014 is the maximum force required to open and close a sliding sash, hinged sash, or hung component of a window or external glazed door. The test ensures the product remains usable by a typical occupant over its design life. AS 2047 sets maximum allowable operating forces by component type; if a window fails the test at factory commissioning or in-service inspection, it is non-compliant and either the assembly or the hardware must be reworked. Verified per AS 2047:2014 (2026-05-16).

Why an operating-force limit exists:

A window that’s too stiff to open:

  • Defeats the design intent: a window that’s not opened is a fixed-light, not a window.
  • Becomes a safety risk in fire egress (BCA Class 1 bedroom escape windows must be openable by occupants).
  • Triggers warranty claims: owners complain within months of move-in.
  • Indicates a manufacturing defect: stiff operation usually means misaligned hardware, swollen sash, or salt corrosion.

The AS 2047 limit ensures the product as manufactured can be operated by a typical adult occupant without excessive effort.

AS 2047 operating-force limits (typical):

ComponentMaximum operating force
Sliding sash (horizontal)110 N (about 11 kg push/pull) typical, up to 150 N for larger sashes
Sliding sash (vertical, double-hung)Counter-balanced, residual force after balance 60-110 N
Hinged sash (casement)Operable handle force 30-50 N
Awning sashOperable handle force 30-50 N
Sliding door (residential)220 N maximum for large doors (typically 110 N for standard)

(All values approximate; refer to current AS 2047 for the actual limits and test method.)

How the operating force is measured:

  1. Test rig: window installed in a vertical frame mimicking the building, factory standard test installation.
  2. Force gauge: digital force gauge with a pulling/pushing mechanism aligned to the handle or pull point.
  3. Direction: the sash is opened from fully closed to fully open, with the force gauge recording peak force.
  4. Method: the gauge measures force at the start of motion (overcoming static friction) and during continuous motion.
  5. Reading: the higher value is the operating force.

In-service inspections by a glazier use a similar method on a portable gauge or a spring scale, sometimes informally with a force-measuring fishing-scale tool.

Coastal-environment failure mode:

Operating force failure is the single most common in-service window complaint on coastal sites in Australia. The mechanism:

TimeWhat happens
At installOperating force within AS 2047 limit
Months 6-18Salt aerosol deposits on tracks, rollers, hinges
Months 12-24Corrosion progresses: roller bearings seize, tracks pit
Year 2+Operating force exceeds AS 2047 maximum; window stiff or unmovable

Mitigation:

  • Marine-grade hardware (stainless steel 316, hot-dip galvanised, or sealed-bearing rollers).
  • Track lubrication maintenance (silicone or PTFE annually).
  • Routine cleaning of tracks (removing salt deposits before they cause corrosion).
  • Specification of tested coastal hardware in BAL or coastal-zone designs.

Common defects detected by operating-force test:

  • Misaligned sash or frame: the sash binds at one corner; force exceeds limit.
  • Roller damaged or seized: bearing failure or salt corrosion.
  • Out-of-square frame: cumulative installation tolerance pushes sash out of plane.
  • Sealant gummed in tracks: site-applied sealant ends up in the track during install.
  • Sash too heavy for hardware (specification error): hardware rated for lighter sash.

Also known as: operating effort; opening force; closing force; sash force test; AS 2047 force test.

Category: Testing.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.