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EarlyBay Forums
Technical
Sliding Door - lower rollers
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<blockquote data-quote="angus" data-source="post: 228525" data-attributes="member: 239"><p>My sliding door needs lots of adjustment to fit properly, but the lower rollers (on the 'front' lower corner of the door) need some TLC - the roller that guides 'in/out' along the runner is fine (the horizontal one) but the one that guides 'up/down' has a buggered bearing.</p><p></p><p>Amazingly the cost of these seems to be about £8 for the one I don't need, and about £40 for the one I do need!!!!</p><p></p><p>I also see you can get 'new' complete brackets and rollers for about £50-60, although in some cases these seem to have nylon rollers....</p><p></p><p>So what should I do - keep my 'original' bracket and swallow the ridiculous price for a single roller, or just get a complete unit...?</p><p></p><p>Also - just to check - am I correct in the saying that the up/down roller is actually at a slight angle, as opposed to being 90 degrees to the other - or has my 'axle' bent?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="angus, post: 228525, member: 239"] My sliding door needs lots of adjustment to fit properly, but the lower rollers (on the 'front' lower corner of the door) need some TLC - the roller that guides 'in/out' along the runner is fine (the horizontal one) but the one that guides 'up/down' has a buggered bearing. Amazingly the cost of these seems to be about £8 for the one I don't need, and about £40 for the one I do need!!!! I also see you can get 'new' complete brackets and rollers for about £50-60, although in some cases these seem to have nylon rollers.... So what should I do - keep my 'original' bracket and swallow the ridiculous price for a single roller, or just get a complete unit...? Also - just to check - am I correct in the saying that the up/down roller is actually at a slight angle, as opposed to being 90 degrees to the other - or has my 'axle' bent? [/QUOTE]
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Technical
Sliding Door - lower rollers
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