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Hello and thanks in advance
this is a bracket which attaches the door to a pull out pantry unit. There are three brackets in total and this is the top one. The top and middle ones sit on top of a bar of the pull out unit so the door cannot fall any further so it does take quite a bit of strain.
I removed the door (without any difficulty) as the bottom runner was stuck etc. the runner is working again thanks to silicon spray but when I went to screw the bracket back in, the hole to receive this one screw seems to be damaged (it’s quite sharp sticking out) and the screw will not engage.
is there something I can do to help/make it engage? I could file the sharp edge down for example?
I guess the other option is to swap the lower bracket up to where this one is because the lower bracket doesn’t take the starting/weight as much but that would be quite complicated to do
Many good ideas above. I was wondering if a nut rivet would be useful in this situation?
Well @Noyade you are correct a Rivnut would simplify the process but would require yet another specialised tool, whilst I fully support collecting tools, a flat head bolt doesn't require anything beyond what a DIYer would already have on hand 👍
https://www.bunnings.com.au/kincrome-85-piece-nut-riveter-kit_p5910345
All good then. 😁
Just a thought.
"whilst I fully support collecting tools"
Totally agree with that @DIYGnome - sometimes buying tools that may be useful in the future, is a good thought.
At the time I was thinking if the de-threaded hole is already there - fill it with a nut. 😁
Cheers!
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