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Problem with a sagging door... - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Problem with a sagging door... (/showthread.php?tid=7350578) Pages:
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Problem with a sagging door... - Enigmatic - 10-02-2019 I have a standard steel sided residential door on the back of my home. It has sagged to the point we need to use a pry bar to lift up the lock set side of the door (opposite the hinges) to engage the deadbolt lock. I tried to enlarge the deadbolt strike plate at first, but that didn't work. Then, I took off the bottom hinge on the door & shimmed it out a bit, but that didn't work either. Can someone help me fix this darn door? What exactly do I need to do? The reveal in the frame is pretty close all around, so I don't think the door is warped. At least my level tells me it isn't warped. What's going on here that I'm missing? Please help. Thanks a bunch. ![]() RE: Problem with a sagging door... - WoodTinker - 10-02-2019 (10-02-2019, 01:51 PM)Enigmatic Wrote: I have a standard steel sided residential door on the back of my home. Sounds like a hinge problem. If it is not the door, it has to be the hinge. Can you lift the door up and notice any wiggle in the hinge? Where/how is it binding? RE: Problem with a sagging door... - Phil Thien - 10-02-2019 I removed the trim on the hinge side, and swapped two of the top wood screws with machine screws that are threaded into wing nuts I inserted into holes I drilled in the stud. Has never budged since. RE: Problem with a sagging door... - CLETUS - 10-02-2019 (10-02-2019, 01:51 PM)Enigmatic Wrote: The reveal in the frame is pretty close all around Define "pretty close". First, take your level and place it on the hinge side and take a picture of the bubble. Next, take your level and place it on the latch side and take a picture of the bubble. Then take accurate measurements of the opening at the top and bottom of the frame. Finally, post all of that here. Or you could take some 3"or 4" screws and run them through the hinge holes and see if that sucks the door frame to the jack stud. RE: Problem with a sagging door... - jteneyck - 10-02-2019 Steel doors don't sag so it has to be related to the hinges or frame. It's hard to believe the reveal is consistent all the way around if the deadbolt won't engage, assuming it did back when it was installed. As suggested, put a good long level on the hinge frame and see if it's truly plumb. If it is, then check the head frame for level. If both are perfect then the top hinge must have pulled away from the mortise in the frame or door itself or on or more hinges has worn badly. Fix whatever's wrong. If the hinge frame isn't truly plumb then make it so. You can often coax it plumb by removing the hinges and driving screws, and/or by replacing one of more of the hinge screws with ones long enough to engage the stud. Sometimes you can cut a moritse a little deeper where needed, or add shims under a hinge to pad out a mortise enough to tilt the door to get the lockside to line up. Take it slow and correct what the door tells you needs to be. John RE: Problem with a sagging door... - mike4244 - 10-02-2019 (10-02-2019, 01:51 PM)Enigmatic Wrote: I have a standard steel sided residential door on the back of my home. RE: Problem with a sagging door... - Snipe Hunter - 10-02-2019 Cheap hinges can bend from the weight of the door. Try swapping the top hinge with the bottom hinge and see what happens. If you have the same problem, it's not the hinges. If you have the opposite problem, replace the hinges. RE: Problem with a sagging door... - fixtureman - 10-03-2019 When you swap them out shim the bottom hinge and use 3 inch screws in the top one RE: Problem with a sagging door... - Enigmatic - 10-03-2019 Thanks for the tips so far. I will check one thing at a time & see what happens. RE: Problem with a sagging door... - Bob10 - 10-05-2019 (10-03-2019, 05:36 PM)Enigmatic Wrote: Thanks for the tips so far. I will check one thing at a time & see what happens. Any chance you have some swelling in the floor? |