Steve Maskery
Established Member
I've made a new cupboard to house my electricity meter and associated gubbins. It's high up on a wall, underneath a flight of stairs, so imagine a rectangle 1000 long x 810mm high, with the top right hand corner cut off at 45 degrees, leaving a hypotenuse 1000mm long.
The box itself is just the left hand side and bottom. The stairs is the RH side and the ceiling the top.
I'm planning to use concealed hinges on the LH side, but with a 1000mm swing, I think that there is a good chance that the door will catch on the ceiling somewhere along its swing (ceiling is currently Artex but is being skimmed tomorrow).
I'm wondering if it is feasible to introduce a bit of a kick downwards, by offsetting the lower of the two hinges, so that as it opens, it also drops a little. I was thinking of mounting the lower hinge 5mm in from the door edge rather than 2, and packing out the plate by a similar 3mm.
Would this work? Will it **** up the clearances too much?
Or should I just accept that I need a 10mm or so gap at the top?
The box itself is just the left hand side and bottom. The stairs is the RH side and the ceiling the top.
I'm planning to use concealed hinges on the LH side, but with a 1000mm swing, I think that there is a good chance that the door will catch on the ceiling somewhere along its swing (ceiling is currently Artex but is being skimmed tomorrow).
I'm wondering if it is feasible to introduce a bit of a kick downwards, by offsetting the lower of the two hinges, so that as it opens, it also drops a little. I was thinking of mounting the lower hinge 5mm in from the door edge rather than 2, and packing out the plate by a similar 3mm.
Would this work? Will it **** up the clearances too much?
Or should I just accept that I need a 10mm or so gap at the top?