How To Fix a Sagging Door that's Rubbing or Won't Close!!!
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- čas přidán 3. 06. 2021
- Three tried and true methods to fix a door that is sagging and is rubbing on the jam or won't close.
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I've used the toothpick trick a number of times. Another trick that works for me is one or two business cards in behind the hinge to 'bring it out' from the door jamb. I loved the 'bend the hinge trick' and will be using that as well. Thanks for the great video!
Depends on wall sometimes wall left right are not level so if you install door sometimes not fit side by side because level is not accurate
Specially if the wall is concrete always make problem is not right level
Thanks my friend, the toothpick trick work marvelously. I was about to replace the hinge.
Toothpicks method fixed my sagging door after 8 years!!!
Thank you!!!
Toothpick? Who knew right??
My added tip for #3, if you put a shim at the top of the door on the latch side you can make the gap the size you want before you bend the hinges. And when you go to bend the hinge loops with the wrench you will see exactly how far you need to move them, because the door will already be where you want it to be!
Good tip
That is cheating!
I was thinking the same thing instead of that "trial and error" method.
Yep exactly my thought....
Great one this helped me a lot!
I’ve been dealing with a bathroom door that was snagging and wouldn’t close for almost a year. Moved into the house with the issue, tried everything I could think of. Watched your video and fixed 2 doors with 5 minutes of work bending 2 hinges. You’re a saint.
That’s awesome Russell! Glad to help:)
Same since last night
Im curious. What did you try first?
Russell, new hinges are always a good thing.
@@johnthree1611 I was wondering that too! 🤣🤷
I've had good luck just swapping the top and bottom hinges. The top hinge is the one that gets "tired" and has its plates separated by a gradually increasing gap. Replacing it with the "not tired" bottom hinge often solves the problem. Especially useful with the steel doors/frames found in older apartment buildings, which have enclosed spring-loaded hinges that don't have anything you can bend.
You mean, "retired". I found they were wear and tear. Once that happens, you have to replace them. Fixing is not a good solution. The problem will come back. Those are only a few bucks to replace. I rather change all of them. I replace them with the better brand with the bearings. They will last for 20 years. And, make sure you lubricate them with lithium grease once in a year.
I had a realtor make a nasty comment about a closet door in my home I was selling. I thought seriously? Is that all you can find wrong? I'll show you. I used tip #3. I am a "not young" woman who loves DIY fixes. THIS was perfect!!! Door makes a crisp snap shut now! Home sold for listed price. THANK YOU!!!
That is rad! Glad the tip worked🍻
@@TheFunnyCarpenter Thanks for the tips... I have different issues with each of my doors...I had a contractor do some structural work and afterward none of the doors upstairs close, but one when closed you get stuck in the room--its a bathroom and I guess when you shower the door swells and you get stuck inside, we've planed the door and it still is fickle. One bedroom door the top sits too far inside the room and the bottom is snug on the stop trim piece, another door is reverse that and the bottom of the door is gapped and the top rubs the stop trim piece, the bedroom with double doors you actually now have to lift the main swinging door to meet the strike plate on the other door. How do you fix the doors when it is 'off' vertically than horizontally (as in my case where the hinges wont fix the door being wracked
That toothpick tip blew my mind. Very stuck door is perfect now. Thank you!!
I recently repainted the doors in an old house that my wife and I purchased last year. Basically every door had the "landlord special" where the previous homeowner painted over every latch, hinge, and screw. I decided to replace the hardware and repaint the doors. When I rehung them... I didn't realize how jacked up everything was going to be. Very good tips. Thank you for the help!
Dealing with the same thing and now we here lol 😆
When I bought my house they must have pulled the doors to paint and re-install. Latches are falling off, door won’t shut, everything is painted over, it’s a mess. Looking fwd to trying these tips.
Never thought of the last fix, it was exactly what I needed. Thank you! I had tried all of the others before, they worked on some of my old doors, but not the stubborn bathroom door. I have old two hinge doors, and with the weight of multiple door hangers on it with wet towels, I can see why it would bend the hinge over time. Bending it back to the original position seemed to do the trick!
As a professional carpenter for 35 years I've always found the no. 2 solution to be my go to. Never tried #3 but will keep it in my back pocket! Excellent video!
That last hinge trick was definitely worth the price of admission. Been doing this a long time. Never thought of it, never seen it. Gonna be my go to trick from here on out ...
It’s a good one for sure- hope it can come in handy!
I love your videos! I really like that you’re Canadian, because products are actually available to me. My husband did some “home repairs” that didn’t go so well or didn’t get finished. It turned out that he was suffering from Alzheimer’s at the age of 45. So now I need to fix things so that I can sell our house. Your videos have helped A LOT!
I’m sorry to hear about you husband Jennifer. I’m glad you’re finding the videos helpful- thanks for supporting the channel!
This tip has been a lifesaver! Had 3 doors that wouldn't close properly and one that wouldn't latch at all. 10 minutes later...success! Thank you
Wow, fix #3 was exactly the method we needed and didn't know. We had 2 doors that were sticking badly and this worked great for both. Thank you!
Same here. Thanks from Finland
hivespeak
The editing, the advice, everything was so easy and helpful. Thanks!
I am a professional caninetmaker and installer and I have learned so many excellent tips from you and I use them almost every week. Thank you and tip 3 is going into the "Legendary" toolbox
Thanks for the kind words Daryl. I’m glad to hear some of the tips r helpful. Enjoy your weekend!
Daryl, you make dogs?
@@kenhill5713 Yes, with bitches though. Not by himself.
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@@danl.4743 I sure wish I knew what you guys were talking about.
I've seen the hinge bending on other sites but you're the first one that lifts the door and shows me exactly which ones to bend and which way to bend them. Thank you.
I'm not a handy man. Oddly enough I'm a great mechanic. But not a handy guy to have around the house. This video saved me from just purchasing a new door. I was over having to lift the damn door every time I went into my shop. And don't get me started telling my wife to "lift when you close the door!" All 3 things made my door work as it should. I appreciate you taking the time to make this video. Not all of us grew up fixing things around the house.
Hey. I'm a windows and doors manufacturer, and that third trick is a genius indeed! Whoop, thanks for the tip!
Thanks Dan
Hinge adjusters for adjusting the hinges on all doors or windows where there may be air between the frame and the frame .. a tool we used where i live for 30+ years .
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The last tip on bending the hinge helped me fix my bathroom door. Finally able to close the door completely. Thank you so much! Great advice!
That's great Nancy, I'm happy the tip worked!
You just helped me save hours and hours of fixing my door the wrong way, and I did it in 5 minutes. And best of all, the door is now actually right and straight. Thank you so much.
Thank you SO much for your tips and how-to demonstrations. I actually had 4 different doors that needed adjusted, which were in various states of misalignment due to a recent re-leveling of our floors with new footer piers. Your tips worked PERFECTIVELY and I to utilize all of your tips to get the doors re-aligned. Thanks so much for the excellent advice!!!!
For the hinge bending technique, don't forget to put a few shims in between the door gap so it's not constantly moving and you can bend the hinge easier and more accurately
Unnecessary
I have a good "fix" for a door sag. Pull the bottom hinge screws from the hinge part thats on the jamb. Run a 1 1/2 screw into the jamb at about the middle of the hinge but closer to the hing pin. Leave it proud about the amount you need to lift the door. Reinstall the hinge screws and check for proper gap at the latch side of door. If you need to adjust up or down just run the screw in or out that's behind the hinge. I call this the adjustable shim method. 😉👍
I guess that's ok, but seems like too much trouble and possible problems. The hinge plate would not be secure, it would be making contact only on the screw head, seems like that could wobble and possibly creak, and any wobble would tend to work loose the three plate screws. Over time your shimming screw might move and the door would sag again. Shims are available at your local hardware store, isn't that a better method?
I never watch this kind of video all the way through. Almost never. This is one of the best home repair videos I've ever seen.
I'm subscribing. Thank you.
Very kind of you to say, thank you.
@@TheFunnyCarpenter
An observation, my friend.
Keep up the good work.
Watched this video because the Algorithm popped it up. How it knew I needed this exact fix, I don’t know, it Prolly didn’t; but…
Watched the video, fixed my problem within 5 minutes after, using a combo of tightening and rebending the hinges.
You have no idea how much insecurity about opening my own bedroom door you just solved.
Thank you.
High quality bamboo chop sticks from nicer take out places work really well for hole plugs/shims. They're just denser than toothpicks or soft wood chopsticks (pre-tapered and usually free).
Great tips, as always!
I use golf tees.
They fit in my toolbox and pouch a little easier.
A bag of 100 10” wood skewers is like a buck at Walmart
@@dan4091 Very true. Sometimes you have a hole larger than a BBQ skewer, however.
I have used that since i started reno's at 24.works very well.
Amazing how little things like a sagging poor closing door can stress me out. Just another reason to love CZcams. Great video and thanks for sharing.
Best wishes on the fix!
Years of 'stupid door' irritation were replaced by a giddy sense of Pride n Accomplishment in mere minutes.
You, Sir, are The Man!!!
Thank you Thank you Thank you 😃
Great video, thanks a million. Really good presentation and tips. I can remember about 50 ago a joiner at work giving me the advice about putting some kind of wood filling in the screw hole and he used wooden match stalks (head off !) . They are really good as they are softer and you can use several if the hole has worn big. 👍
Nice tips. For the last tips, you could use a wood shim or even cardboard on the top door gap first to align the hinge before bending. That way you know how much to bend.
Great point
Or remove one leaf and chisel out 1/16 or 1/18 and that would work.
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@@jesusislord6545 Quite right, straigtning doors is a sin. In fact it was on the original draft of the 10 commandments "Thou shalt not alter a hung door".
I use all three of these plus in some cases, shimming the hinges if necessary. All work well
Yay, it worked!! #1 took care of my door issue, which I’ve had for months and it’s been driving me crazy! I had lost hope that it was fixable when I decided to try one last time and found your video. THANK YOU The Funny Carpenter for these helpful tips! You rock!
#3 did the trick, thank you. I was baffled by that wider gap at the top for days. A few minutes of careful bending and everything lined up perfectly -- job done!
Over a year I’ve dealt with a door that woke the entire house up. Two long screws and five minutes later and problem solved. (And still have the bend the hinge trick in my arsenal now) You’re the man!!!!
Good to hear Steven🍻
I was ready to fill the old holes and drill new holes for the door-catch plate before watching this video. 3rd (last) solution is the most common sense approach and fixed everything without any damage! Super simply described and very helpful! Thank you!
I wish I came across this video sooner. We have french doors in our 3 year old house that bind at the top. I adjusted the screws and did the other stuff. It helped but started rubbing again recently. I bent the hinges like you mentioned. Took 5 minutes and works perfect. Gives more clearance than the other methods and was actually pretty easy.
Wow thank you!!! It worked!! My door has been rubbing the floor for years now and all i did was to do is tighten all four screws on the top hinge. Amazing man !!!
Sir your videos are helpful and straight to the core. I hate listening to CZcamsrs talk about themselves before they start fixing the problems. Great stuff!
Thanks mate. I try to get to the point but do have a bit of fluff in there just for fun.
@@TheFunnyCarpenter I am talking about the guys who say How to .... And the first 6 to 7 minutes of their videos is them talking about their channels, anecdotes, products they have used, sponsors, and don't forget the annoying music. I can't stand those type of videos. Joking here and there and making it fun like you did is different from what this other people do. Sometimes they are showing you and they interrupt the fixing part to talk about something. Your video was fun, straight to the point and best of all. it works. Great Job.
These are GLORIOUS fixes!! On the sly - I worked these on two doors…and astounded my husband the carpenter!
My add to this is to be careful when you’re painting doors…that extra little bit of paint added along the edges can send a perfectly hung door into Crooked Door Hell!!! Think “very thin paint” on edges!! Thank you, sir!
Fantastic! Im glad the tips worked for you:)
@@TheFunnyCarpenter I watched alot of differant DYI because I do repairs myself , found your videos finally && your NOT a HACK!!!! WOOHOOO!!!
Last fix worked great for me! I thought I'd never get the latch on my front door to go into the hole in the plate without resetting either the plate or the whole doorknob! This was so easy and effective, thank you!
I was struggling yo fix a bathroom door for 6 months and had tried your first two methods plus sanding back door edge to no avail. Your 3rd tip fixed the door in two minutes. Thanks for a great tip
Yes, a longer screw that gets right into the house framing is often all you need. Also- if you must shim out a hinge I find that Arborite (Plastic laminate) samples are often the perfect thickness
Arborite shims r the best! Perfect 1/32”.
You tips are particularly useful.
And your accent is pretty comfortable! Thanks from France.
Thank u! It’s always hard to recognize your own accent, but I’ve always thought our accent was slightly slow, with very clear pronunciations. Lol this may not be true though.
Trick #2 was amazing! I really was all set up to have to go straight to #3 for a stubborn bathroom door but that long screw in the back hole really sunk and lifted the door perfectly in line. Thanks friend!
I recently changed out some painted-over hinges on the French doors to my home office and they wouldn't close anymore. #1 helped with a couple of screws that weren't tightening, and #3 worked like a charm. Thanks so much for this video!
I am astounded at the consistently increasing amount of leverage as related to the size of my wrench, in all situations.
Randooooom
I just had to say "Thank You"... I have stared at my bedroom door for over five years, it wouldn't close. I changed the hinges to black and ever since, the door was wonkey. Now... it closes and everything works great. Thank you for posting a video that actually teaches people something.
Thanks for sharing Tom- it’s great the tips were helpful!
The fact that you have stared at your bedroom door at all, let alone five years, seems to be your principle problem. Let's focus on that first.
Brilliant! I had to do the last 2 steps. Had 3 spinning screws! Replaced them with longer ones and did the "hinge bend". Door closes like its Brand New! Thank you SOOO much for making this video!
Your video is still helping folks out, the hinge bend thing was just what I needed, thanks!
You look like a genius. I've never tried the hinge bending trick. However, I am the self perclaimed "Door Whisperer".
😂now you got some new materials to whisper...
After struggling w/ a misbehaving door for, like maybe 10+ years, I clicked on your video, and paused it 38 seconds in, and looked at my door to see if it was sticking at the top, and it was. (Your video still paused.) So I looked at my top hinge and noticed my screws were loose - but when I tried to tighten them, they just kept on turning. - Which explained why the cheap door had been this way from the beginning. So I removed each loose hinge screw, and stuck a toothpick into each screw hole to take up the extra space, before screwing the screw back in - and breaking off any remaining toothpick once the screw was tight. It worked! It made the screws tight or tight enough to pull the door back enough to straighten it to close correctly. I have no idea if you have this tip in your video.
Almost all the screws on my bathroom door turn and turn too. Somebody said if that happens that you need longer screws because your screws are stripped. But how can they be stripped if they're only going into wood? I'll try the toothpick/wood method first.
Wow! Bending the top hinge worked perfect! 8 years of lifting the front door just to lock the deadbolt! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!
Brilliant! Applause from the peanut gallery here in dusty West Texas. Your #3, bend the hinge trick, helped shift and seal a huge gap in my trapezoid shaped door opening. Now my perfect rectangaular steel exterior house door no longer hits at the top, and it sealed a daylight gap and dust out at the bottom.
I have no carpentry skills, but I can follow directions, and yours worked perfectly.
I kept thinking I was going to have to remove the trim and reshim the entire door again.
I did follow and apply all of your tips in order shown and #3 with a large set of Channel locks to bend the hinge did the trick for me. Thank you!
I've had an aluminium framed door doing my head in for months and yep head is still wobbling, thank you so much for the 3rd tip!
I've actually used all three of these. I used to work at a privately owned dormitory in Chico, CA where college used to be second to partying and with solid core doors and drunk kids, they used to get slammed a lot. Couple that with 50+ years of building settling and regular adjustments were a norm, just had varying severity. Because of my figuring out these different ways, pretty much anything door related became my job. Still, cool to see them posted as top ideas.
This video is so good that I came back and played it while I fixed a bathroom door. Had to wait for the long screws to arrive. Followed your steps in order. Viola! Thank you.
Great Job with the pro tips. I never thought about bending the metal hinges. Now I'm confident in fixing my doors!
Nice tip with the tooth pick!
If
I’ve seen the pool cue method you have to glue in and redrill, but the tooth lick is way easier. Never seen the loop bending method before either. Solid video !
Thanks buddy!
What is the "pool cue" method?
For bending the loops, I would shim the bottom of the door to bring it back to where you want it, then bend the loops to match the door hinge loops. That way you don't have to guess where you need to take it.
No need to release the bottom hinge. Just pack the gap at the top with cardboard until it is in the correct position, then bend the hinge to fit.
@@jeremyashford2145 I don't see how that would help. Packing the gap at the top would make the gap up there bigger. But for bending the loops you want the gap smaller. When I was thinking of shinning the door it wasn't at the hinge side. I was thinking shim under the handle side to bring the top hinge corner closer to the jam. Which is what you need.
@@brandonb417 pack the top left closing jamb side and you don't need to bend down once.
Don't even need to shim anymore. They make these little bags that look like they have blood pressure cuff air squeeze thingies... I know, I'm getting very technical now!
Anyway, it's a very strong bag, about 6 inches big, and you squeeze the thing and inflates the bag, which lifts the door up to the precise height you want. Then when you're done, you release the air and remove the bag. It holds like 300 pounds. Im gonna go in my garage later, find mine, get the name for you
EDIT: it's called the "Rhino Air Wedge" and they are about $13 on Amazon. I have one, and I use it for all kinds of things. They're great! They sell them in home Depot (at least they do in my local home Depot) but they're cheaper on Amazon. And Amazon has kits of various sizes, which home Depot does not
Or just don’t bother shimming and do it how he did it by eye balling. If it looks good it most likely is good.
That last tip is brilliant! I've used the first two many times, but that last one is gold! thanks!
Great suggestions! I just bought an old house, built in 1905 and I have 2 BR doors that drag on the floor and won't close all the way. I thought I'd have to plane the bottoms of the doors but now I think it might just be the hinges, so that is what I'll try first. Thanks for your video! Very helpful because I'm an old nurse, not a Carpenter!
Didn't know about Step 3, it's brilliant! going to test it out later after work! Thanks
Good luck Brian!
Step 3 does not work for me. The hinge is too flush and frame prevents me from adjustment with wrench
@@beartug Try hitting it with a hammer. I'm not joking.
FastCap makes the Knuckle Bender. "The Knuckle Bender is designed by a carpenter and allows you to quickly adjust any sagging door. The Knuckle Bender is adjustable to any size hinge, so making an adjustment is fast, simple and accurate every time. The built-in hinge pin remover allows you quickly remove any hinge pin."
You are classic, and I enjoy your videos! Earlier this year we bought a 2 story house built in 1890 which was later moved down a river then put on its current location. Every door in the house is off 1/2" - 1" from one side to the other. We use bean bags to keep the doors open in the house. This year my goal is to "straighten" each door, starting with the outside doors to keep the air from blowing thru the house. Your video was very helpful!
Thank you for this. It helped engage me in a repair that i was letting go.
Exactly the way to do it...I’ve installed and repaired thousands of doors...good tips that save frustration.
Throw the entire house away and buy a new one.
It’s the only way.
Dude you are loaded😂😂😂
I'm just about to that point rn
if only it were that inexpensive😂
@@mychajlodoss502 I'm at this point smh
Just dropping a thank you for this video. A great, practical lesson spoken like it’s common sense
Fix #3 is a real magic trick. Best solution I’ve ever found. Thank you!
Thanks for checking out the video
Living in Michigan, it's either really cold, or really hot. Everything is always shifting, especially on a slab foundation.. Thanks for this video
Best wishes!
Living in Houston, it's either hot, dam hot, or sweltering. Humidity ranges from "dripping" to "drenching." Everything is always shifting.
First 2 I knew about , the last one is the one I will remember to do from now on. I never thought you could bend the hinges. Cool . Gracias mucho.
I think you meant "Grassy as$ muchacho."
You just saved me thousands of dollar replacing my patio door. Top hinge step 1 & 2. God Bless
I don't know how you put out more than one documentary a year, the work that's involved to make something like this, I can't even imagine.
Great fixes! I never thought of any of those... I usually shimmed the bottom hinges on my own doors to square them up. But I'm a plumber so thanks for the lesson! But as a plumber you're using the crescent wrong backwards. You always want the pulling or pushing force on the solid half mooned shaped side. I know why you did it the way you did ( to allow more movement during bending without damaging the door) but it hurts me everytime I see some one using them wrong.
My dad was a plumber and he would drill it into my head how to properly use a crescent wrench too!
I cant bend them to save my life.
It was my impression that in this case he turned it that way to get better leverage for bending the hinge. If he had used it the "correct way" (and I agree with you on that) he wouldn't have had as much control or leverage to bend the hinge.
Not arguing, but, like the reply above, I’ve always found the crescent moon shape allows me to get the most leverage because the moon rolls along the surface.
Why is the moon side supposed to be the driving force?
@@ChrishBlake because the driving force against the screw on the wrench will, after repeated uses, stretch the metal. It makes the wrench "sloppy" and more likley to slip when extreme force is applied. The screw side is meant as a guide/holder. The best example I can give is using channel lock pliers in reverse. The force will try to open your hand instead of clamping down on the piece you're working on.
Pure genius. I do the same type of hinge bending to get Chevy/GMC truck doors to line up.
Thanks Matt
Blown away by the toothpick trick, thanks!
Just tried the hinge bend and now I look good also. Great tip fixed my door in 30 sec. Thank you
I have never been more pissed off in my life than I am right now trying to fix this stupid door
Well I'll be damned if I didn't learn something. Never thought about dending the pens like that. Great idea bro
Thanks Ricky
For real. That last one was new for me.
That last trick is my new favorite trick. Thank you!
Holy Sh#!. Been slamming this door for years. Fix 2 was $$$$. Thank you for the content!
Dang bro I’m a maintenance technician for apartments never thought of bending the loops thanks for the tips
Then maybe you should just clean toilets
@@gregrupar135 Mean people suck.
The last one is what you want to do. The first two options just help secure the door but most likely the hinge alignment is why it's leaning. I also use a paint mix stick as a shim in the jam to help hold things in place while doing this.
The last one did the trick on my front door. Would have saved me some time if i started with it but after years of a sticky front door I'm pretty glad it worked. also kicking myself i didn't do it sooner
@@Art-uz3fk How was the door sticking?
Thanks. New pre hung door was giving me fits! I had already tried the hinge bending. Didn't work but long screws into the frame did. Thanks for your help. Jim
I never thought I would watch a carpentry video, but I needed fix #3 and this video is so well made that I had to subscribe. Thanks!
Wish I seen this fix years ago. Been fighting my front door for years. Come to find out it already had oversized screws and the heads where to big. I ground the heads down and put toothpicks in the holds. Closes perfectly now.
Let me guess.... You wear a nametag to work huh?
@@wealldieatthehandsoflovedones and you live under a bridge (your mother's basement)
@@pleaseandthankyou708 close... I live in a camper. At Wal-Mart free
@@wealldieatthehandsoflovedones so you squat in a place where people wear name tags to work and post up like a superior... Sleep tight
Great work Eric. Few things are as annoying as a jiggy front door, with the juvenile name calling in this thread being one of those things.
For the second tip. You can remove the entire wall side hinge and put your screw in behind it to hide it beneath the hinge.
The hinge bending adjustment did it for me… you are the man!
Recently bought an older house; and many doors will be improved by this video - Thanks!
good tips. I use the 3rd one a lot. if your doing extreme bending, you may need to bend the middle hinge a bit too.
If you need to fix a stipped door screw hole. Get a wood golf tee (chopstick works too but wood is softer so not as good). put wood glue on it, hammer it in there, cut off excess, let dry, redrill hole.
Definitely a good option
Dowels?
@@pearlperlitavenegas2023 dowel works great
For the 3rd tip, it’s easier to see if you went far enough or too far if you put a few business cards in between the door and jam on the door handle side until you have enough cards making the desired gap that matches the bottom. Then when your loops are aligned, you’re done.
Damn , what a hack way... smh....
@@mariskaaryan6925 no.. he's right. If you don't put something between the strike side of the door and the jamb, you can easily pull the hinge screws out of the door enough to strip the holes.............
A use shims to lift the door until it latches. The bend loops in correct place.
Thank you, though my doors were rubbing due to expanding! Fixed 3 doors in 5 minutes. Thank you 😊
THANK YOU for the macguyver trick!!!! it saved my butt when dealing with screws stripped beyond the point of removing with an extraction kit. i used metal rulers to set the gap correctly before bending the hinges and everything came out almost perfectly square. The exterior door feels so light when swinging now that it seems lighter than the storm door.
Bending the hinges worked perfectly! Great tip! Thank you!
May I recommend using a shim on on the handle side to hold the door in place while bending the hinge?
I will definitely remember fix #3. I never thought of that as a solution.
I gotta say though, do not ignore the possibility of foundation issues being the actual cause of your door alignment issues. The door from our laundry room to the garage was getting harder and harder to latch. It was also during the transition between cooler and warmer weather so I attributed it to that and didn't give it much more thought. I messed with the strikeplate a little and made the door easier to latch. Problem solved, right?
During this time, we also noticed our bedroom door wouldn't stay closed. We had another door that was showing some alignment issues. The interior door to the laundry room, which is also on the same plane as our bedroom door (2-story house), would also drift open and a bedroom door right across from it wouldn't stay open. That's when we realized we had a much larger issue to contend with.
Almost $20,000 later and now all those door issues are history. It was the foundation. The cool part was watching the foreman feel the gap on top of the front door as the guys outside did the lifting. Afterwards, we could see the difference, but during the lift, he could feel it moving. It was expensive, but it was also fascinating.
Now that you've found the cause of the sagging door, I hope you've looked into the cause of the foundation shift. How is your water/drainage system? Do you have adequate gutters and drains to lead the water away from your house?
Did your home insurance cover that?
@@immanuel162 it was only one side of the house that was sinking. We had a lot of rain last year and the area between our house and our neighbor's stayed wet for extended periods of time. Two, 2-story houses barely 15-20" apart and a tree all provided shade, not allowing the soil to dry properly. Excess water drains away just fine. We've lived here almost 13 years and we've had rainy years before but the tree was much smaller (new house when we moved in). The other side of our house is fine. A 1-story next to us on that side and plenty of sun with no tree in the way. We caught the problem in time and while it cost $20k to fix the foundation, it is solid now.
@@Jaur-jaur no, because it was caused by shifting soil.
@@awlthatwoodcrafts8911 stinks that they don’t cover that… Like, what’s the point of home insurance if they won’t cover a $20k repair? Couldn’t something like that cause something much worse than a sagging door?
Outstanding video...Just fixed an exterior wind sprung door on a metal building with your pulling the hinge pins, aligning the door in the opening and bending the misaligned hinge pin loop. Thank you very much!
Thanks for this! I used the, "bend the hinge," technique on a door I installed and now it fits perfectly.
Good tips TFC.
Another tip - when you open a new box of hinges there is typically a piece of thin cardboard that is perforated. Those are for shimming the hinges. You can place them behind the casing side of the hinge or the door stop side to effectively "angle" the hinge. In case you don't want to bend the hinges.
This is especially helpful when doing heavy duty/commercial grade hinges when bending is much more difficult.
To fill screw holes, I typically use cedar shims cut thin and then just snapped off flush.
Excellent point on shimming the hinges- I could probably make a few more vids on doors tricks!
I've made shims out of soda cans. The thin aluminium will cut with a pair of scissors.
THIS!!!!! The problem with the bending method presented in this video is that you won't get the bends perfect, not even close. Therefore the holes will not form a straight line and it will grip the hinge pin. That is guaranteed to make an impossible to eradicate squeak and may make the door noticeably stiff in operation. Angling the hinge like you suggest will keep a factory perfect alignment of the holes.
"Box of hinges" .....git oudda here! This is a DIY video.
I'm staying in a hotel room for a few weeks and the sagging bathroom door causes the top corner to scrape against the frame which radiates an extremely loud and irritating noise each time you open or close it.
Watching this video helped me realize what causes the sag, so since I don't have any tools I just folded up a paper coffee cup from the hotel room and stuffed it underneath the bottom hinge between the door and the jamb. It forces the door to correct the sag just enough so it doesn't scrape against the frame anymore - worked really well in a pinch!
Nice fix hotel handyman!
Did you get a discount for staying? :)
That's so low tech they would not have put it on McGyver. Reminds me of the time I fixed someone's TV by using a coat hanger for an antenna and a paperclip to wire it into the F connector on the TV.
Lucky you don't drink coffee, or else you would have been steamed. hahahahaha
That's using the old bean!
Thanks a lot for your help
I changed screws first bit bigger and bit thicker but problem not solved
I tried your 3rd technique and got fixed
Only bit tight on bottom but good in a way won’t loose heat/cooling
No more door stuck and making noise ❤