The Shed – September-October 2019

(singke) #1
To check that the self-closing
mechanism would operate as intended
I made a panel from scrap MDF the
height of the glass and about 300mm
wide. I attached the top and bottom
hinge brackets to it and set it in place. It
turned to the closed position as soon as
I let it go, which was encouraging. With
more weight, the door would certainly
swing closed.
I didn’t want the bottom hinge to have
to take any dynamic loads from the
closing door suddenly stopping when
the hinge bottomed out, so I installed

a 1700mm length of 40x40x1.6mm
aluminium angle on the left-hand side,
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any closing forces.

Just like a bought one
Then all that remained was to set
the glass in place. A friend helped me
carry it in its frame from the garage to
the upstairs en suite, where I removed
the frame and positioned the glass in the
shower. I bolted the top hinge bracket to
the glass, positioned the bottom hinge
in the 90-degree open position and
then gently slid the glass forward until
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hinge bracket and the glass and secure it
in position. A front support ensured that
the glass stayed vertical until the bolts
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to hide the bolts and make it look like a
proper job.
Then the moment of truth — I
removed the front support and let the
door go. It swung closed, bounced
lightly against the rubber buffer and
stopped in the closed position. The right-
hand side clearance is 5mm from top to
bottom and the varying clearance on
the left side (5–20mm) masked by the
aluminium strip. It was very satisfying.
I had a celebration shower to test the
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and as it should.

Then the moment of
truth — I removed the
front support and let
the door go

The top hinge fitting installed with covers
masking the bolt

The bottom hinge fitting installed with
covers masking the bolt


Upgrade shower - done and dusted

Free download pdf