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You¡¯re starved for some ice cream. The ice cream scoop is in buried deep in one of the kitchen drawers. You give a pull on the drawer and the pull comes off in your hand and the scoop remains in the drawer. Once you finally jimmy the drawer open and satisfy your ice cream needs your next task is to replace the pull. Relax, whether it is a drawer or a door, replacing a pull may be the easiest home repair that exists.
The first step is to decide what pull style you want to use as a replacement. Check your door. Is there one hole or two holes? Pulls are attached to the door with screws. Some pulls are attached with one screw; some are attached with two screws. If you have a two hole pull measure the distance between the two holes. All pulls do not have the same distance between holes. Make certain the replacement pull matches your current measurement.
Once you have determined whether you have a one hole or two hole pull it is off to the hardware store to pick the style you want. Pulls come in all sorts of styles, shapes, color and material. The variety can almost be overwhelming. More common styles can be found at almost any hardware store. Fancier and more intricate pulls can be found at specialty hardware stores, on the web or in specialty hardware catalogs. If you are replacing a two hole pull via a catalog or the web make certain the distance between the holes matches the distance on your door. If you are simply replacing the old with a similar new one it may be difficult to find one that matches perfectly with the old. Styles come and go, as do manufacturers. If you cannot match the old, try something new.
Now you have your pull and it is time to put it on the door. You¡¯ll need a screwdriver. Check the screws to see if you need a regular or a philips head screwdriver. A regular screw has one slot. A philips screw has a ¡°+¡± pattern on the screw. Pick a screw driver that matches your screw.
Here¡¯s the easy part. Hold the pull up to the door matching the holes on the pull with the holes on the door. Insert the screws through the door hole into the matching pull hole, tighten loosely with your fingers, then tighten down snugly with the screwdriver. Be carful not to be too harsh in tightening. If you tighten too far you may strip the threads in the pull, meaning the pull will not stay secured to the door.
There can be a problem at this point. On rare occasions the screw may be too short or too long for the thickness of the door. Too short and you cannot reach the holes of the pull with the screw. Too long and the pull will not fit snugly against the door. So you need to find a screw of the right length. If you have an old screw from the broken pull you can probably use that one. But if you are replacing the screw that came with the new pull, you also have to make certain the replacement screw is the same diameter as the one you are replacing. Too small and the screw will not hold in the screw hole of the pull. Too large and the screw may damage the threads of the new door pull.
If you have a two hole pull and you absolutely cannot find a new pull that exactly matches the distance between the two holes of the old pull you can still use the new pull. Measure the distance between the holes on the new pull. Transfer this distance to the door. Now you will have to drill new holes on your marked spots. It is best to drill from the front of the door because when the drill goes through the door it may splinter the wood at the exit point. Best that this be hidden on the back of the door. This splintering can be minimized by drilling slowly when you are almost through the door. You can also place some masking or duct tape over the exit spot. This helps minimize the splintering as the drill bit comes through.
All of the above also holds true for metal doors. The only difference would be if you have to drill through the door. If that is the case, make certain you have a drill bit that can be used for metal. Wood drill bits do not work in metal.
Ok, you¡¯re all done. Pull that door open, grab the ice scream scoop and eat to your heart's content. |
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