Dovetaildave
Established Member
........With all the cash !!he duly turned up and shepherded everyone out of the room while he was working. He opened it, presented his bill, got paid and left.
........With all the cash !!he duly turned up and shepherded everyone out of the room while he was working. He opened it, presented his bill, got paid and left.
This is what I've always done but often the screws pull sideways following the softest route. This makes the handle stiff and leads to pulling at it and loosening the screws again. As the wood is so very thin on our doors, above the lock, there is very little for the match to expand against. I'm going to try the hot glue and being more careful to line it up, if I can't get that right, it'll be drilling a hole for a grub-screw. Always helpful ideas here, thanks.Another trick for tightening screw holes is a matchstick shoved in (after use) and snapped off flush. I use it every time I put doors back on after repainting.
Our house is slightly younger but still has the same issues, however my problem isn't the springs, its fitting the door handle screws into 130 years of redecorations. Any repair to the damaged wood I make causes the handle in miss-align. I'm sure someone reading this thread will have the perfect solution.
My father was a master at carpentry, he could build anything. One tip from him was to use a bit of steel wool. Roll it up and insert. Maybe try that , if you do not have a matchstick/skewer.Another trick for tightening screw holes is a matchstick shoved in (after use) and snapped off flush. I use it every time I put doors back on after repainting.
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