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Cheap Mangled Doorknob Hosed Up
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HeyBub[_3_]
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Posts: 11,538
Cheap Mangled Doorknob Hosed Up
wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to remove a doorknob from a * closed * door. The
doorknob is a very basic brass colored noname knob. It has no keyhole
and no lock. Just a knob which used to open the latch. The knob got
harder and harder to use, then one day it refused to open the latch at
all. So I am trying to remove it so I can install a new knob, or
maybe just leave the hole there. It is a utility closet door.
I have removed the 2 screws from the accessible side of the
knob. The other half of the knob, on the other side, is still in
place, but I can push it back and let it fall down behind the door
inside the closet, and see what I can then do with the latch which
will remain in the door and the jamb (wood into which the latch
juts) .
I've tried the "credit card" trick and it doesn't work.
Removing the hinges looks like it won't work either.
The plastic part on the latch is broken, so there's no need to save
anything. I'll be tossing the knob.
If I push the other half of the knob away, can I then just wiggle the
latch out from the jamb? I know, why not just try it? But maybe it's
necessary to keep the other half of the doorknob intact to get the
latch to retract ????
Door opens inward or outward?
If outward, ( towards you) you should be able to see the bolt. If you can
see the bolt, you can reach if with a reciprocating saw!
Actually, if the bolt has a "feeler" on it, a half-round smaller pin that
senses when the door is closed and locks the bolt in place, you could saw or
bend that "feeler" to allow the bolt to move.
A hole saw the same diameter of the existing hole - and made for metal -
could be used to eviscerate all the innard's working parts.
As a last resort, take comfort that interior doors don't cost much.
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