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Bob M wrote in
: Smitty Two wrote: In article , Bob M wrote: Gentlemen; About a year ago I had a contractor install a new steel, prehung exterior door. Although I don't know the brand, this door was most likely obtained at Home Depot. There appears to be nothing wrong with the quality of the door and its surround. I am trying to sell this home and the inspector states the door is in need of adjustment but was not specific. I looked and looked and the only issue I could find was that compared to other doors in the house it appears to be set more deeply into the opening as seen from the inside. This means that when closing the lock bolt hits the 1-1.5" of trim edge before it reaches the strike plate. This has never been a problem for me as I relatively effortlessly pull the door closed just fine. Apparently the potential purchaser has a different idea! As I am not a carpenter I am hoping that some of you readers who may be familiar with installing/repairing similar doors might have an idea as to what I am describing and even more hopefully how it can be repaired? I am hesitant to call even a contractor because I don't even know how to best describe it. Does the door need to be reinstalled? If so, in what way? I can't imaging the door could be incorrectly sizes as it looks just fine. Any ideas, suggestions, recommendations, help GREATLY appreciated. As one can imagine, in this housing mess and economy I am already taking a real bath on this house. Thanks - Bob Since the potential purchaser is apparently the one squawking, why not offer him $200 and let him fix whatever he and the inspector believe to be wrong? One thing you could check is whether the hinges have metal spacers behind them, if so, removing one or more of them might help. We recently tore down a wall containing a double steel door, in order to bring in a large machine, and rebuilt the wall and door thereafter. Getting the doors to work flawlessly wasn't difficult, but it was damn time-consuming and fiddly, involving multiple iterations of "try it and see." Another possible issue is that the hinges could be in the wrong place, so that the hinge side of the door contacts the stop before the latch side of the door does, which puts torque on the hinges every time you pull the door closed. We just ran into that yesterday on another door whose hinge bolts had broken loose from the concrete block wall behind the jamb. Thanks for the input Smitty Two. The purchaser is being unreasonable and won't settle for a cash allowance (lazy I guess). Then find out EXACTLY what the problem is from the PURCHASER. Figure out a solution. Propose it to the purchaser. Do nothing until you BOTH AGREE on a solution. If purchaser is feeding on the buyers market aspect he may decline anything you do until he gets a new door. Of course, don't let a single few $C item hold up a sale. Any halfwit realtor (if involved) wouldn't let it get to that. I will look for hinge shims and bring a big hammer. Unfortunately the house is 300 miles away. Bob |
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