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Date:         Sun, 19 Oct 1997 22:36:12 -0400
Reply-To:     Byron Spears <bspears@EROLS.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon mailing list <Vanagon@Gerry.SDSC.EDU>
From:         Byron Spears <bspears@EROLS.COM>
Organization: Spears Enterprise
Subject:      sliding door not secure
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hi, Vanagon lovers!

Behold the tale of a very minor engineering triumph:

The sliding door, insecurely closed by a latter-generation family member, opened while SO was negotiating a left turn at a busy intersection, dumping a vacuum cleaner on the roadway. When SO reported the event, I heard a tiny threat of future "Vanagon must go because this is unsafe." Within 24 hours a similar event happened to me. I smelled a distant lynch mob.

Today, in full flight from dreaded Bill Paying, I wandered the aisles of Hechinger's Hardware, selecting chain (like, 1/4" interior width; flat links (no twist to 'em); welded) and sheet metal screws (package says "oval head"; looks like what I thought you called "pan head"; 12x1-1/4).

Safely home, I drilled & screwed a screw in the left edge of the sliding door (near the top) and, with the door closed, a screw a couple of inches to the left of that screw. I cut off a 3-link length of the chain, finessed either end over the head of each screw, and voila! the door will not by any means slide open when chain in place. Especially since I repeated the process some 11" lower (just above the grab handle) and down about a foot off the floor (this one takes 5 links because of the offset of the interior of the body).

The major imperfection noted as yet is that if you try to open with chains in place, you are stuck and have to go out to slam door to allow enough slack to get chain off screw head. So I just put a Phillips handy just in case, so you can remove the screws to open from inside if this happens....

Undoubtedly there is an easier & more elegant way to fix the problem, but for me this was not bad.

Byron Spears Clinton, MD 87 GL 63 Chevy II 86 Maxima


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