The attached photo is of a Hettich controller for the bifold action of a Nolte wardrobe door.
The controller in the photo is working normally, but another of the total four does not allow its bifold door to close without a second (human) hand to help it. If no second hand, it judders and jams.
This is because the leaf spring in the hinge of the controller arm has broken and fallen out.
I have been offered a new leaf spring. It's a powerful spring which has to bend into a U shape and have its two ends persuaded into slots. The controller is about 7 feet above floor level, so I want to remove the hinge/control arm unit from the door and hold the hinge socket in a vice.
Looks straightforward: unscrew the two screws which have Pozidrive # 2 heads (the most common Pozidrive head).
PROBLEM
It's not straightforward! The screws start to turn anticlockwise easily. After little more than a quarter of a turn they suddenly act as it they have hit an inviislble stop. Manual twisting harder on the screwdriver is futile. They won't move any further.
At this point, the hinge socket it slightly loose. So the problem does not seem to be something like the the tail of the screw coming hard up against the back of the socket.
I am very reluctant to try to force the screws to turn more. An excellent PZ#2 driver starts to "cam" and damage the screw head. The timber (some sort of fibreboard) of which the door is made is only 19 mm thick. The door in question has a mirror on its front face, apparently bonded into place.
Are these "screws" not what they seem, but some sort of fastener which goes into a socket fixed into the timber and turns to lock? If this were the answer you would think that the hinge socket could be wiggled out from the bore in the door once the heads have been turned up to the stop. But the socket is slightly loose and does not want to move outwards any further from how it is when the screw heads have been turned to the apparent maximum.
Has anyone else experienced, and solved, this problem? If so, HOW, please?
The controller in the photo is working normally, but another of the total four does not allow its bifold door to close without a second (human) hand to help it. If no second hand, it judders and jams.
This is because the leaf spring in the hinge of the controller arm has broken and fallen out.
I have been offered a new leaf spring. It's a powerful spring which has to bend into a U shape and have its two ends persuaded into slots. The controller is about 7 feet above floor level, so I want to remove the hinge/control arm unit from the door and hold the hinge socket in a vice.
Looks straightforward: unscrew the two screws which have Pozidrive # 2 heads (the most common Pozidrive head).
PROBLEM
It's not straightforward! The screws start to turn anticlockwise easily. After little more than a quarter of a turn they suddenly act as it they have hit an inviislble stop. Manual twisting harder on the screwdriver is futile. They won't move any further.
At this point, the hinge socket it slightly loose. So the problem does not seem to be something like the the tail of the screw coming hard up against the back of the socket.
I am very reluctant to try to force the screws to turn more. An excellent PZ#2 driver starts to "cam" and damage the screw head. The timber (some sort of fibreboard) of which the door is made is only 19 mm thick. The door in question has a mirror on its front face, apparently bonded into place.
Are these "screws" not what they seem, but some sort of fastener which goes into a socket fixed into the timber and turns to lock? If this were the answer you would think that the hinge socket could be wiggled out from the bore in the door once the heads have been turned up to the stop. But the socket is slightly loose and does not want to move outwards any further from how it is when the screw heads have been turned to the apparent maximum.
Has anyone else experienced, and solved, this problem? If so, HOW, please?