Ron, Thanks so much for your imput on my sagging door situation. I will ask around at my local auto parts store for this hinge repair kit. I am in San Francisco and I haven't seen any Autozones around here. I definitely need new hinge pins. Thanks, Nick. On Wednesday, December 25, 2002, at 10:46 AM, ronald wrote: > This is for Nick Nichols: They sell a hinge repair kit at most auto > stores > like Autozone. It consists of new Hinge Pins and bushings of different > sizes that replace the worn out parts on you old hinge. The doors > were so > heavy, and the hinges seldom got the lubrication they needed to keep > the > friction down,that theyjust wear out! Try your passenger door and > youwill > see that it is probably as tight as a new car, because it didn't get > the use > your driver do did. I have used the process on both American and > Foreign > cars, and they seem to be all the same sizes that the kit fixes. Just > remember that the door is HEAVY, and I always use a floor jack and > block of > wood to protect the bottom of the door, not just from scratches, but > from > bending it. Have someone help you for safety purposes. Good luck. > Ron > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Phil Patterson" <hilljack7@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Wednesday, December 25, 2002 12:21 PM > Subject: Re: IML: Sagging door > > >> Your hinges are probably wore, you may want to look into getting them >> rebuilt or finding some replacements. If anyone has some good > recomendations >> on hinge rebuilders, it would be much appreciated! I've seen some >> listed > in >> Hemmings and Mopar Collector's Guide, but haven't done business with >> any > of >> them, so can't make any kind of a recomendation. The old hillbilly >> trick > of >> raising the door involves putting a washer or two between the hinge >> and > the >> door on the bottom hinge. This will usually raise the end of the door > about >> 3 times the thickness of the washer, but this is just an estimate. >> Just >> support the door very well, and soak the bolts good with solvent >> before >> removal. If the bolts seem stubborn, you may be advised to remove the >> interior panel and soak the threaded part inside the door with >> solvent as >> well. Hit the bolts sharply with a hammer to shock them loose, but be >> careful not to mar the paint on or around the bolts. Hopefully they'll > come >> loose without too much difficulty. >> Good luck and Merry Christmas! >> Phil <>< >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Nick & Barbara Nichols" <3nichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> Sent: Tuesday, December 24, 2002 8:27 PM >> Subject: Re: IML: Sagging door >> >> >>> >>> Hello Everyone, >>> >>> I recently purchased a '61 Imperial LeBaron and am trying to align >>> the >>> driver's door. It is sagging and doesn't shut completely. I've >>> tried >>> adjusting it as described in the shop manual and no luck yet. The >>> rubber all around the door is good. There is some play in both >>> lower >>> and upper hinges. Are these hinges shot? Anyone have any tips? >>> thanks, Nick Nichols >>> >>> >>> >>> ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- >>> This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please >>> reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be >>> shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the >>> Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >>> To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm >>> >> >> >>