Date: Tue, 05 Sep 95 08:53:38 EST
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From: "ray hale" <ray.hale@santafe.cc.fl.us>
Subject: door hinge plates(long)SUCCESS
finally! the new cargo doors are on and adjusted properly
and i never want to do this again. here's the deal:
1) posted the list and got several great ideas
2) sat down with all ideas including my own and beers and
stared at the offending area day after day until the light
bulb went on
3) cut the heads off two old door hinge screws that were
already destroyed
4) put two nuts on to protect threads, placed in vice, and
drilled a small hole lengthwise in each
5) cut a slot in the old head end so they could be turned
with screw driver
6) inserted a piece of monofilament with a washer smaller
than the screw diameter in each drilled hole and tied it
off. this would be the end that would save the plate if it
fell down the door rail
7) removed the top screws of each hinge in one door and
inserted the screw/monofilament assembly, screwing it in far
enough so it cleared the hinge, leaving room for the hinge
to pull out. at this point the monofilament hung out of the
hinge and door rail about three feet
8) drink another beer and take a deep breath
9) remove the bottom screws of each hinge
10) get another person to hold the door and gently pull
hinges out of the body while you hold on to the monofilament
and catch it when it comes out with the hinges, top and
bottom. this tricky because you have deal with both hinges
and keep hinge plates from falling down the rail. the
hinges themselves could break the monofilament at this point
if they get hooked on anything or if the doors come out too
fast for you to keep up with.
11) now the doors are off and you're holding both hinge
plates in place with the monofilament, ready for the new
doors to slide into place. you must weave the monofilament
through the new hinge holes and back through the holes in
the door rails (on the body) so that when the new door
hinges are inserted the line comes out of the body holes
enabling you to still pull the line holding the hinge plates
in place.
12) line up hinge plates with anything that will stick
through the bottom holes and then insert one new door screw,
with anti-seize this time, and semi-tighten. you still need
someone to hold the doors for you at this point.
13) once you have both hinges, top and bottom, held in place
with the bottom screw in each, you can remove the top
screw/monofilament assembly and insert the remaining new
screw in each hinge
14) have another beer and do the other door
i hope that is fairly clear. the words need pics to really
do the job but feel free to ask questions. there are four
hinges for the two doors and all but one hinge plate was
flopping in the door rail, just waiting to fall down into
never-never land. on one door when we pulled the old door
out, it broke the monofilament and the hinge fell down but
then fell out onto the ground. it was a mixed blessing as
we realized there was even more work to be done at a later
date. but at that point we were very glad to have the plate
back in our hands. when you're done, you need to loosen the
bolts a little and adjust the doors so they fit properly.
thanks to mark janello for the warning in the first place
and then for supplying the groovy 5mm allen screws to
replace the stock phillips head. thanks to rusty for his
great idea which mark then added upon. thanks to my
co-worker and excellent wrenching/motorcycle riding/former
bug owner/beer drinking friend for courage and inspiration.
and thanks to lea for patience and common sense and getting
in there and dirty with me. that's what this list is about
for me. that's what good friends are about. i feel lucky!
ray sorry for the long story. it's been a long process:
there's no success like failure, and failure's no success at
all
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