As we've had a few posts about door pins recently, it got me realising that one of my doors wasn't fitting as neatly as I seem to remember it once did. I took a look at the gaps and realised that the washer underneath the bottom of the door had worn and needed replacing. And so today was that day.....
Ok, so why the post ? Well, it's mostly in amazement when I found out that a mod I did over 25yrs ago has actually worked !
Background - when I bought my car in the 80s it had been standing for a few years and the doors opened but were stiff. I remember Chris Foulds telling me it wasn't a job to put off until later because when the hinge pins seized then they started wearing the bobbins in the door apertures, and once they were oval then the job got a whole lot bigger.
We chatted and I learned that the steel pins often rusted in the steel door bushes and once this happened instead of the pin remaining stationary and the bushes/door moving, the pin/bush/door moved all together and wore away the aluminium bobbins. He even showed me a couple of brass inserts he made & sold to sort out the problem on his restorations.
Even with only marginal rust it was possible for the steel pin/door bushes to develop enough friction to move together and wear the aluminium inserts, so I looked at ways round that.
In the end I used 1/2" stainless bar with a step cut as shown below. That stops the pin rusting but there's still the problem about friction at the pin/bush interface being greater than the pin/Aluminium bobbin interfaces.
By taking off the front wheel arch shield you can see the top & bottom body inserts and where the pin comes through. I made a rough steel plate with a matching slot, bent in an "L" shape so that when assembled it jammed against the internal bodywork. It's all held in place with a split pin.
It's hard to describe, easier to look at pictures....
Anyway, this afternoon I started. It took me longer to find a bolt long enough to use in the bottom of the door pin than it did to take the door off ! Wheel arch shield off, split pin & steel plate out, bang, bang, door pin out, door off. As simple as that, didn't even have to touch the bushes in the door.
Lower washers replaced (stainless wearing surface this time instead of plastic), hold door in position, slide the pin back. Door fits as it should, adjust striker plate and it's time for tea and biscuits. Who said doors were hard work ?
(that'd be me, a few posts earlier)
So anyone else about to replace their doors, think about locking that pin in place regardless of what materials you're using. It will make it so much easier next time around.