Does anyone make high-friction door hinges?
replying to Doug Miller, John I. wrote:
Problem with bending the hinge pin is it will eventually cause the hinge to to wear out and become noisy. -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...es-520000-.htm |
Does anyone make high-friction door hinges?
14 years ago I would have suggested gluing a peice of carpet the the bottom of the door for hidden friction to the floor.
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Does anyone make high-friction door hinges?
On Fri, 7 Sep 2018 19:54:48 -0000 (UTC), Wayne Boatwright
wrote: On Fri 07 Sep 2018 09:44:02a, John I. told us... replying to Doug Miller, John I. wrote: Problem with bending the hinge pin is it will eventually cause the hinge to to wear out and become noisy. Can't say that I've seen one, and a bent hinge pin is just asking for trouble. At one time we had hinge "brakes" that the hinge pin went through before going into the hinge. They were adjustable from totally free movement to holding whatever position you left the door in, or slowly alowing the door to close on its own. Can't say I recall where we got them, as it's been over 20 years ago, but they do exist. Use a bolt instead of the pin and tighten it up to taste. .... or just smack the barrels with a hammer. |
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