Is there a relatively simple way to resolve doors that have leaks due to the door frame being slightly out of square/ The door opens/shuts OK but there is a gap at the the bottom side of the door. You can see the light coming through in the 1st picture

Views: 3065

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

It depends on what the issue is, but in many cases you can tweak or shim the hinge side. To tweak it - open the door, place a 16P finish nail between the two leaves on the hinge you need bumped & slowly close the door - not all the way but just enough to open the hinge.

Looking at the second picture you might want to install a larger screw in the top hinge to help pull the door back in place - this also brings us to another trick which is closing a hinge back up (this is tougher on exterior doors) but essentially with the door closed you would use vice grips on the top & bottom part of the exposed hinge (not the barrel) & squeezing it together

Sweet, it worked to correct the sagging!! Unfortunately the light still leaks through at the bottom of the door, it appears the frame or door is warped/twisted slightly. The bottom of the door sits towards the inside of the house, the top leans towards the outside. On the hinge side the door is even.

Here are some photo's showing what I'm referring to, hope they make sense:

Unbelievable... Sean shared an old-timer carpenter trick online. Dude, that's 20 demerits for you. In order to become qualified to learn those tricks, a newbie has to spend 6 months on the job fetching coffee, dense-packing the dumpster with gnarly debris, and humping 2x12-20' rafters up a shaky ladder to the roof. 

Seriously, Bob, I wonder if part of the problem is that the door is no longer parallel to the jamb. When I see light coming through along the latch side near the bottom, I figure the door might be warped. Fixing that is a trick, and sometimes it's not possible without major surgery. Also, is there a piece of weatherstripping missing on the head jamb?

Personally, I'm undecided about the ROI on minor weatherstripping tune-ups. You have to hang a new door to correct some of them, or pull the jamb and re-hang it. It can be a big deal. If there are lower hanging air leaks in the house, I'd hit those.

The head jamb has magnetic weatherstripping, it makes good contact so I left it alone. I think you're right on about the door not being parallel to the jamb, and it's a steel door so I'm afraid the door frame itself is what's not right. If the door wasn't North facing I wouldn't worry about it, but when we get those 20+ MPH North winds in winter you can feel the air coming through the crack. If it involves removing the door frame or other major surgery I may just leave it alone. I've even thought of upgrading the storm door, but we're back to the ROI thing.

Bob, if you open the door about 6" and lift on the door, up and down several times, do you feel any play.  Tight hinges will provide no slack.  Worn hinges will allow the door to fall away from the hinge side at the top and in at the bottom and you will feel some slop when lifting as above.

Bud

Bob, with a steel door, you might just try brute force. Put a block of some kind in between the door and the head jamb, something a couple of inches thick. Then, close the door against it and apply some force at the bottom. You need to do this very carefully, a little bit at a time, but you may be able to bend the door enough to make contact the full length of the latch stile. With a wood door this will never work, but you might get lucky with that one. You have to be sure you are not doing any damage to the hinges or the jamb itself. 

Of course the other thing to do is to take off the trim on the latch side, cut the nails behind the jamb with a sawzall, move the jamb in a bit at the bottom, renail it, then re-foam the gap and reset the trim. 

Bob,

   A quick and cheap fix to a twisted frame (or door) would be a door stop-type weatherstripping that could be attached to the latch side of the frame with the door closed, so as to snugly fit against the door as it presently latches.  It might look less obvious if you did both legs and the head as well just for uniformity.

RSS

Home Energy Pros

Home Energy Pros was founded by the developers of Home Energy Saver Pro (sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) and brought to you in partnership with Home Energy magazine.

Latest Activity

Bryce Cramer joined Leslie McDowell, BPI's group
Thumbnail

Building Performance Institute (BPI)

BPI is the nation's premier standards development, quality assurance and credentialing organization…See More
2 hours ago
Bryce Cramer replied to Mike Kandel's discussion June's Stump the Chump: What's Wrong with this Picture? in the group Building Performance Institute (BPI)
"Key is this was done in warm weather. The back wall of the room was also uninsulated, but the lower…"
2 hours ago
James Hatheway added a discussion to the group Job Board
Thumbnail

Quality Assurance Verification Specialist - Little Rock, Arkansas

CLEAResult (clearesult.com) is looking for a QA Verification professional who wants to leverage…See More
4 hours ago
Profile IconJames Hatheway and Mike Wallis joined Diane Chojnowski's group
Thumbnail

Job Board

This group is for posting jobs related to all aspects of the home performance industry including…See More
4 hours ago
Profile IconJames Hatheway, Malcolm Gray, Perry Ning and 2 more joined Home Energy Pros
4 hours ago
tedkidd commented on Mike Rogers's blog post HOMES Act introduced with Bi-Partisan Sponsorship
"% savings programs suck.  Ask the folks in CA.  When your incentive structure pits…"
6 hours ago
Emilian Karchev joined Michael Stuart's group
Thumbnail

INFRARED THERMOGRAPHY USERS

This group is dedicated to knowledge sharing and discussion of infrared thermography for building…See More
12 hours ago
Emilian Karchev replied to Tim Marlett's discussion Removal of bad smells from mold contaminated attic
"I think to have mold, then there is moisture and is good if you can look at and make a…"
12 hours ago
Jack Sadyak commented on Jack Sadyak's blog post Why Getting a Quantum Heat Pump is a Better Choice?
"Hello Tom, Don't worry I will let you know everything you can contact me at Heat Pumps…"
14 hours ago
Dennis Heidner commented on Macie Melendez's blog post Passive Proponent—Q&A with Brandon Weiss
"Don't forget Build America program from…"
18 hours ago
John Wes joined James Sayers's group
Thumbnail

Marketing Energy Efficiency

Sharing ideas, tools and examples of promoting energy efficiency to consumersSee More
18 hours ago
John Wes joined Tom White's group
Thumbnail

Weatherization

Share your concerns and successes as a weatherization professional, or information for this…See More
18 hours ago

© 2013   Created by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service