Stupid bathroom door

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  • KLF
    Forum Newbie
    • Jun 2006
    • 98
    • Barrington NH
    • BT3000 (of course)

    #1

    Stupid bathroom door

    Been doing a complete facelift on the house lately, getting it ready to put it on the market. When I got to the bathroom, I carefully filled all the dents and holes in the trim, painted everything nice and pretty, then I took the door off to paint it. The old hinges were really rusty, so I tossed them and installed new shiny brass ones. Re-hung the door a few days later, and now it won't stay open. Put my 6' level on the jamb, and darned if it isn't waaay out of plumb, like over 1/2" from top to bottom. My guess is the old rusty hinges had enough friction in the pins that the door would stay put. But with new hinges, gravity is winning. It's a REAL PAIN to have the bathroom door constantly closing on it's own, especially since this is a very small bathroom, the door hits you in the back when you're standing at the sink.

    I'm not ripping the jamb back out and shimming it, and spoiling my nice paint job on all the casings. Anybody know of a way to get a door to stay put? I tried pinching the hinges in a vice so they would drag on the pins, and it worked great... for about a week. Now it's back to the way it was. Argh!!
  • annunaki
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2008
    • 610
    • White Springs, Florida
    • 21829, BT3100, 2-BT3000(15amp)

    #2
    A Thought Out Of The Box

    What if you replaced the pins with threaded bolts and self locking nylon insert nuts, then experimented on how much to tighten them for desired drag?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fileodecahedron.gif

    Comment

    • Tom Slick
      Veteran Member
      • May 2005
      • 2913
      • Paso Robles, Calif, USA.
      • sears BT3 clone

      #3
      bend the pins slightly, it will create just a little more friction and hold the door open.
      Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison

      Comment

      • OpaDC
        Established Member
        • Feb 2008
        • 393
        • Pensacola, FL
        • Ridgid TS3650

        #4
        maybe couple of shims of some sort cut to fit? have to be super thin though but will change the plumb line and balance
        _____________
        Opa

        second star to the right and straight on til morning

        Comment

        • KLF
          Forum Newbie
          • Jun 2006
          • 98
          • Barrington NH
          • BT3000 (of course)

          #5
          Originally posted by Tom Slick
          bend the pins slightly, it will create just a little more friction and hold the door open.
          Originally posted by OpaDC
          maybe couple of shims of some sort cut to fit? have to be super thin though but will change the plumb line and balance
          I'm gonna try both of these. I think the bolts & nuts will look kinda odd, but who knows...

          Comment

          • TheRic
            Veteran Member
            • Jun 2004
            • 1912
            • West Central Ohio
            • bt3100

            #6
            Try roughing up the hinges, the parts were they sit on each other / holds the pin. Also make sure all the oil is off.
            Ric

            Plan for the worst, hope for the best!

            Comment

            • kramer katt
              Established Member
              • Aug 2004
              • 375
              • SO CAL, USA
              • BT3100 and Craftsman 100

              #7
              bend the pins

              putting a bend on one or two hinge pins is the old-timey carpenter's trick to fix this.
              should work fine.
              Just put a small bow into the pin as you still need to drive it back into the hinge.
              Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler
              --Albert Einstein

              Comment

              • crokett
                The Full Monte
                • Jan 2003
                • 10627
                • Mebane, NC, USA.
                • Ryobi BT3000

                #8
                Bend the hinge pin. I have a bedroom door that would not stay open. I bent 2 of the hinge pins and now it stays where I put it.
                David

                The chief cause of failure in this life is giving up what you want most for what you want at the moment.

                Comment

                • KLF
                  Forum Newbie
                  • Jun 2006
                  • 98
                  • Barrington NH
                  • BT3000 (of course)

                  #9
                  Thought I'd put up a postscript to my door problem. I had to put the final coat of paint on the jamb & trim the other day, so I had the door hinges off. When I reinstalled, I carefully traced and cut a shim about 1/8" thick and put it under the jamb side of the bottom hinge. This pushed the door a tiny bit closer to plumb, which was fine since there was ample room in the opening on the other side. But the other benefit is it threw the hinge pins out of alignment, essentially putting the door in a bind as it swings. The hinges seem to have enough flex that it's not a problem to absorb the mis-alignment.

                  Anyway, the door now stays where it's put. I'll resort to bending the pins if it doesn't last. Thanks for all the suggestions.

                  Comment

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