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coloradotrout coloradotrout is offline
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Default basic door latch question

On Dec 16, 10:50*pm, Red Green wrote:
coloradotrout wrote in news:9618e0ff-5065-4e23-
:





With the info posted here, I did an experiment.


The large bar is what locks the door in place into the strike plate.
The smaller bar should not fall inside the strike plate, but rather be
depressed about half-way. *When it is, it prohibits the large bar from
being depressed into the door. *So to answer my original question, I
think the door should fit snug just as the large bar extends into the
stike plate, and at that time, the small bar should be just behind the
large bar, but resting on the strike plate and not inside the opening
of the strike plate.


So back to my real issue. *My door is not fitting properly. *I think
it's hung slightly out of square as the lock side bottom is lower than
the hinge side bottom, and the crack along the lock-side is not
equally spaced. *When closed, I can see daylight towards the bottom of
the lock-side edge, and when it rains I get some water coming inside.
The sweep at the bottom also rubs too much on the lock-side (as
compared to the hinge-side), and is worn down and cracked and split.


So what I really need is an education on how a properly hung door
should fit, and then how to hang the door in that way.


What kind of door is it?

If you are capable of installing a new door and the old one has just too
many issues, a new pre-hung steel door can be got for like $130. If the
frame is out of square, to properly fix it the old one may have to come
out anyway.

For 130 and a couple of bucks for shims you get new door, new frame, new
weatherstrip, new hinges, everything aligned and square (if installed
properly).

You need to make the call which is best bang for the buck.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


The door is only 2-3 years old. It's a Jeld-Wen steel. I think the
installer was a bit inexperienced, rushed, or figured "oh well, it's
just a shop".

Could someone point me to some tips for hanging a door?

So initially I will get out the 4' level and check the hinge and lock-
side jambs for plumb (or plumb bob). Then I will check the top for
level. The door should then fit squarely inside the jamp with an even
gap all around.

I guess I'd have to pull off the inside and outside trim if I need to
adjust. So this may get ppd until spring or a warm winter day!