The Locksmith Journal Mar-Apr 2015 - Issue 37 | Page 32

32 • industrynewS PROUD SPONSORS OF THIS PAGE Figure 2 Figure 1 Figure 3 < Continued from previous page After nearly an hour of banging, umming, ahhing, discussing the problem with suppliers, tea swilling, and yet more banging, I came to a most unwelcome conclusion: the only way that we’re going to get this miserable thing to budge is to take an angle grinder (or similar) through the gap, and try to cut off the hooks. I must have been about 30 seconds away from resigning myself to failure, giving up and going to buy an angle grinder, with the sad knowledge that it would likely rip up the edge of the door and the frame. For some reason, I thought of just giving it one last go. ‘Bashing those hooks with the hammer must have done something…’ I thought. Enlisting the assistance of my customer (something that I would never normally do), I inserted the wedge above the top hook, leaving space just in case the hook retracted. I showed my customer where to hold the wedge so that it had sufficient tension, and then tried sliding a very thin screwdriver through the gap and up to the hook. It moved; there was a little bit of play in it! It was still a good centimetre inside the keep though. More tension on the wedge that was now bent by nearly 30 degrees… Walk the hook back with the screwdriver, take a second screwdriver underneath and angled in under the hook and inside the keep, and hit it with the hammer. Even though the hook refused to retract, I now had a screwdriver firmly pinned between it and the frame. I repeated this for the next hook down, then the next, and by the time I got to the bottom hook, it offered little resistance to my efforts. The door now had each hook pinned back [Figure 1], but still under excessive tension. Having checked that there was nothing else protruding from the door into the frame, I went around to the front and applied a firm, size 7½ right foot to it. The door swung open as if a drunk had opened it in a bid to make last orders at the bar. Result! The door was opened as per my client’s instructions: No damage (save for a couple of completely unavoidable, and barely noticeable scratches on the frame by the top hook). But why had this happened in the first place? Well, the gearbox had completely collapsed, but for a door that was just over a year old, that seemed rather strange. The new strip was installed within 5 minutes, and I went to close the door. All became immediately apparent: when I attempted locksmithjournal.co.uk | mar/apr 2015 Sponsored by STANLEY Security to raise the handle, the hooks just wouldn’t engage in the keeps. I enquired as to if this is how the door normally was, and my client responded in the affirmative, indicating that you had to push the top of the door. A spirit level then showed that the door was indeed warped by nearly a centimetre at the middle from both top and bottom [note the gap between the spirit level and door in Figure 2]. Despite making adjustments to the keeps, the door still required that it be pushed in at the top to allow it to close properly. This is not an issue whilst you are inside the house, albeit an inconvenience, but it certainly does pose problems when you come to leave the building. The excessive force required to lift the handle to engage the hooks had resulted in the catastrophic failure of the old gearbox [Figure 3], and after coughing up £250 for the repair, I still had to inform my customer that it would happen again if the underlying fault was not to be rectified, namely, replacing the whole door with something that doesn’t warp. Ultimately, whilst it is becoming ever more popular, it is this locksmith’s opinion that MPLs should never be installed on real wood doors.