At Home In The Woods

   / At Home In The Woods #2,411  
The doors got hung. I don't think I like these door hinge stops. I've always seen stops that have 2 stoppers. These things look to me like they will try to bend then hinges if then doors is opened too forcefully. Does anyone have anyone experience with stops like these? Are they ok?

Thanks,
Obed

I can't tell if the are on the middle hinge or not, they do seem to work there. At the top or the bottom the doors will flex some.

I have also seen one of those turned the other way stuck through a hollow core door.

On edit, Shane suggests one at the top and one at the bottom that is probably the best way to use those.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,412  
We used the baseboard mounted when we could. For the few doors where that did not work, we used 3 of the hinge mounted door stops. The doors are solid (not hollow). I had to put a little RTC sealant on some of the stops to keep the screw part from slowing moving so that all three shared the load. If you really put them to the test, the door jam, trim, and hinges all flex in a most unpleasant way.

The rubber baby buggy bumper thingies [ <-- technical term :laughing:] on the end of the screw deteriorate with time, I suspect they've got a 5-10 year life and then they will have to be replaced.

Someone said "necessary evil", I agree!

Floor drain codes seem to vary widely by region, and sometimes even by inspector. All you can do is ask and adapt. I put in condensate drains for our heat pumps and they dump to the outside. This was OK since they were condensate drains. Around here, garages have to either have a slight slope to them or drain(s) to the outside. Mega YMMV area...

Pete
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,413  
I hate those hinge door stops, they damage the doors easily and moulding it pushes on. I used to have one then later had 2 and it was better. damage to door is not as bad as just one, but better then nothing. I wish I could use floor stop but the door swings into a sloped ceiling and hits ceiling if it not for the door hinge stop.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,414  
We've had the hinged door stops on our doors for 6 yrs. now and they work fine..the doors do not flex..they are solid doors though and there is no visible wear of tear on them...

How hard are you folks on your doors ?
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,416  
We have had a couple of the hinge door stop for almost 15 years now and you made me go look to see if I was having any problems that I did not know about. It looks like the only problem I have is the paint has worn on the door where the rubber bumper hits. Other then that I have not had any problems with them. I did have issues with a couple of the base board bumpers that stick out and get in the way when vacuuming the floor.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,418  
How hard are you folks on your doors ?

Some folks are gentle enough that they could get by without any kind of stop. Others could have a freakin' rail road tie laying behind the door and still manage to bust up whatever is back there.

I am on the gentle side (patting self on back :D ). My wife is rough on stuff. She could tear up a steel ball with a rubber mallet.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,419  
I have the door hinge stop at one location. Good idea to use more than one. I have broken one in 13 yrs.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #2,420  
Some folks are gentle enough that they could get by without any kind of stop. Others could have a freakin' rail road tie laying behind the door and still manage to bust up whatever is back there.

I am on the gentle side (patting self on back :D ). My wife is rough on stuff. She could tear up a steel ball with a rubber mallet.

I'm right there with you on this one. It amazes me the things my wife has destroyed. I bought her a top end vaccume one year and she managed to destroyed it in about 9 months.:confused2: After that I got frustrated and bought her a shop vac. It's still alive 4 years later.:laughing: She gets frustrated at the kids for not picking up their toys and will just vaccume them up instead of taking the time to pick them up. That's how she usually destroys a vaccume. The shop vac is built for that type of vaccuming.:laughing:
 

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