Door Misaligned? Reset the Frame





By Thomas A. Westerkamp  
OTHER PARTS OF THIS ARTICLEPt. 1: Maintaining Locks, Hinges, Closers and Exit DevicesPt. 2: Card-Operated Locks Offer Managers FlexibilityPt. 3: Door-Hardware Maintenance Includes Lubrication, AdjustmentPt. 4: This PagePt. 5: Door-Hardware Maintenance: Weather-Stripping Basics


Doors become misaligned either from age or from damage, such as being hit by material handling equipment or other objects. Either the door or the frame sags out of square. In cases where technicians ignore these conditions, both eventually will occur.

Door misalignment usually occurs with wood doors. The solution to the problem is to fasten a toggle bolt attached with two long wires to the upper edge along the hinge side and the lower edge along the strike side of the door. Tightening the toggle bolt will draw the door back into alignment.

Decorative office doors generally do not misalign in this way. Instead, they tend to become misaligned because the frame gets out of line. Frame misalignment usually occurs because of the shifting or settling of a wall, though it also can result from damage, as well.

In either case, the solution is to reset the frame. Technicians might have to remove the wall to get at the shims at the sides, top and bottom of the frame. They can remove the shims, reset the door, plumb it with a bubble level, and install new shims to hold the door in place. They should note where the shims were located when they removed them and place them in the same locations.




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  posted on 9/1/2008   Article Use Policy




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