John Brown":mge5hsqq said:
Not sure I quite understand: Do you mean that you drill a hole parallel with the broken screw, and then try to push the broken screw into the new hole?
I've made a tool, of sorts, but clamping a guide block in place is well nigh impossible, as the front "corners" of the unit are curved.
Anyway, I've decided the only thing to do is to move the hinge up by 10mm.
I'll have to fill the gap with something, but being on the underside of the bottom hinge it won't be very visible.
Thanks for the replies and suggestions.
This is probably for longer screws, I had to take out a load of sheared hinge screws from exterior iroko doors recently.
so the plug cutters might not work.
A bit hard to explain for such a simple thing, but I think you know what I mean...
You would end up making a rectangular plug that would be parallel with the grain, so it would not have the jarring
effect of cross grain severed fibres.
Another thing is the end grain doesn't compress if you were to lever that broken screw into the drilled hole. cheap metal bits are only used for the job.
More gluing surface, and it may not protrude from a hinge in this case.
Saying that those straws sound interesting.
Another thing you can do if your into wrecking a set of pliers
Is gripping the screw that you have been trying to pick at/lever into a drilled hole,
for some time
and gripping the pliers with a mole grips and levering on that(with a protector underneath), or a jimmy bar.
Tom