We have the same problem with patio doors and back door.
Concentrating on the back door, this appears to have dropped slightly at the
non-hinge side so it now catches when opened/closed.
This suggests some movement at the hinges which is exaggerated by warm
weather!
Pictures of the door and hinge are
http://i292.photobucket.com/albums/mm30/thescullster/Back_Door.jpg and
http://i292.photobucket.com/albums/mm30/thescullster/B-Door-Hinge.jpg
Has anyone seen similar to advise on adjusting method please?
TIA
Phil
The fault is almost certainly incorrect fitting of plastic packers
around the bottom panel. That panel is the only diagonal bracing on
the door, without which it will parallelagram-deform under its own
weight. Unfortunately, this is something very few fitters seem to
understand, so it's a very common fault. This normally applies to
the glass units too, but with your thin vertical glass units, that's
less effective.
--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
As Andrew said, you probably need to heel and toe the door. Following site
gives some guidance:
TIA
Phil
"To stop a door dropping the glass itself has to be braced diagonally corner
to corner by the insertion of plastic packers slipped in the gap between the
glass and frame, under the beading. On the hinge side the packers go at the
bottom corner, whilst on the lock side, the packers go at the top (opposite)
corner "
(Pedant mode on)
Thought it didn't look right.
Parallelogram.
/hides behind couch