Thought I would post my attempt and version of door hinges, to avoid the more costly units available.
Made of 1-1/8"OD Delrin (Acetal), 1-1/2"OD -1-1/8"ID acetal spacers, 1/2"-20 SS nuts and bolts, 1/8" SS spring pins, 1/4"-28 x 3/4" SS set screws, 1/4"-20SS threaded rod and coupling nuts and 1/16" thick olite washers.
The acetal is a slight press fit (1-1/8") into the door bobbins. Square hole, round peg. The 1-1/8"OD acetal is offset drilled about 1/8" to allow both in, out, fore and aft movement, an eccentric. The bolts are pinned to the acetal so the bolt and acetal move as one for adjustment and the unit as a whole pivots in the 1/2" body bobbin hole. Both top and bottom units adjust independently with the 1/4"-20 threaded rod holding the upper pivot unit in-place. The ends for the rod sit in a machined recess in the pivot bolts, with tension supplied by tighting the coupling and locked in place with the jam nut. The 1/4"-28 X 3/4" set screw is placed in a threaded hole drilled through the door bobbins preventing the pivot unit from moving in the door bobbin, ensuring the 1/2" pin rotates in the body bobbin, all on the olite washers. A 1-1/2" OD 1-1/8" ID acetal spacer, about .550" tall is what controls door height and pivots on the bottom door and body bobbins.
I debated using the olite washers as acetal is self lubricating, but I had them so I used them. The door adjustment is great in all axes. Setting door height was a trail and error measurement. The 1/4"-28 set screw holes in the door are visible when the door is open, but a rubber plug will cover just fine. The whole assembly is somewhat of a hassle to install, but for $60 worth of Mc MasterCarr stuff and 2 days on the lathe, it was worth it.
Hope this helps others.