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Uncle Monster[_2_] Uncle Monster[_2_] is offline
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Default UPRIGHT FREEZER DOOR STILL DOES NOT SEAL

On Sunday, July 23, 2017 at 2:27:41 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
On 7/23/2017 12:45 PM, Uncle Monster wrote:
On Sunday, July 23, 2017 at 10:14:09 AM UTC-5, MJ wrote:
I have a garage freezer for 5 years with no problems. One Day door would not
close properly. I replaced the door seal thinking that would fix the
problem. I adjusted and adjusted the top hinge over and over pushing it up
down in and out . I will always have a 1/4 gap somewhere on the handle side
of this freezer. it is almost like the door is warped. The freezer is level
side to side and front to back. there is no ice build up or items that
prevent door from closing. I leave the gap on the bottom and can easily
close it completely with little foot pressure. I am ready to get a new
freezer any suggestions would be helpful.
--

If someone hangs on to the door to support their weight while they bend down to look for something in the freezer or refrigerator, it will pull the hinges out of place. The screws holding the hinges to the cabinet will have to be loosened, realigned then the screws tightened back up. This is dependent on the brand and model you have. You didn't mention either in your post but you can find instructions on YouTube for realigning doors on different brands. ヽ(ヅ)ノ

[8~{} Uncle Door Monster


I gotta disagree with you Unc - the OP said he/she had adjusted the
hinges with no improvement . Weight on the door , yes partly . But IMO
what has happened is that the stuff in the door trays - coupled with
leaning on it - has tweaked the door out of plane . That is , it ain't
flat any more . It's also possible that mis-adjusted leveling screws
have tweaked the "box" out of square , pulling the sealing face out of
plane . The door can be checked from outside by taping a 1/2" block to
the face at all 4 corners . Then stretch a pair of threads from corner
to corner - one atop the other , then the other atop the first . If the
two threads are just touching each other both ways , it's flat . You can
do the same with the front edge of the box the see if it's tweaked . I
first saw this test several years ago when a co-worker was making sure a
door frame was in plane . The door can be tweaked back in plane by
putting a block between it and the box where it touches and pushing on
the other corner on the same side of the door . If it's the box adjust
the feet but it may take a while for it to settle .
--
Snag



It must have been a big gal to warp the door? You right about the door itself being warped. I'm just wondering how it could happen. Perhaps the door was slammed shut with something hanging out of the freezer and when the door closed on it, it bent the door. Make and model and pictures of everything would help us figure out the problem. ヽ(ヅ)ノ

[8~{} Uncle Warped Monster