AJB Temple
Sequoia
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2019
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Made these thick and heavy Iroko inner gates about 8 or 9 years ago. * They are around five or six yards wide as a pair. Jet wash and spray of oil restores the colour to brownish every couple of years. Now a gap has developed between them at the top. They are remote control electric. CASE. (Wish I had bought a heavier duty kit as wind pressure is a challenge I had not forseen).

Deep M&T construction, glued and pegged with Iroko dowels.Posts were green oak, bottoms resin treated and sit 5 feet into the ground in barrel sized concrete hole. When installed, and for the first few years, gates were dead square and flat, and posts spot on vertical. The adjustable hinges need to be tweaked with 30mm spanner to account for a few mm or seasonal movement. In the last two years only the gates have developed an aversion to each other at the top, so that they don't come together perfectly anymore. The RH gate closes first (as that has the outside overlap, and the left gate meets the bottom and stops with the effect in the photo. Both gates are true with the posts. Recent crack in left had post appears to be just cosmetic but I might be wrong. It's hard to see any actual twist on the gates so I may be fooling myself. The RH post might have moved a tad I suppose.


I'm at a bit of a loss as to how to fix it. Although it doesn't look like it in the snaps, most of the problem lies with a bit of twist that the RH leaf has acquired. First thought was to attempt to pack the hinges. Whip the bolts out thought I. When I put them in, I drilled pilot holes and liberally applied vaseline to the galvanised steel bolts. They were put in by hand with a socket and ratchet, not rammed in with an impact wrench. As you can see I have tried to remove two of the big top bolts, quite gently with a 1/2" socket and both snapped like cheese. Oak has eaten the bolts. Like it does.

Because the weight is too much for me, I didn't want to take the gates off - just loosen each hinge plate and pack. If I snap the remaining top two bolts, as is likely, then it will be four deep plugs to cut and replace (not easy), and it may not work as a solution.
I wondered about a straining wire pulling from top left to bottom right. Basically my question is has anyone trued up old gates like this that moved after several years. Recommendations please.
* The gates have withstood quite extreme weather (really heavy wind and wet - then 35C summer) and an incident with one of our roving travelling friends who somehow got confused about which drive he was entering and managed to get his arm trapped, leading to a sad hospital visit and some very nice close up portrait photos. However, this trauma didn't do irreparable damage to the gates unless he somehow moved a post when his brakes failed on his vehicle.

Deep M&T construction, glued and pegged with Iroko dowels.Posts were green oak, bottoms resin treated and sit 5 feet into the ground in barrel sized concrete hole. When installed, and for the first few years, gates were dead square and flat, and posts spot on vertical. The adjustable hinges need to be tweaked with 30mm spanner to account for a few mm or seasonal movement. In the last two years only the gates have developed an aversion to each other at the top, so that they don't come together perfectly anymore. The RH gate closes first (as that has the outside overlap, and the left gate meets the bottom and stops with the effect in the photo. Both gates are true with the posts. Recent crack in left had post appears to be just cosmetic but I might be wrong. It's hard to see any actual twist on the gates so I may be fooling myself. The RH post might have moved a tad I suppose.


I'm at a bit of a loss as to how to fix it. Although it doesn't look like it in the snaps, most of the problem lies with a bit of twist that the RH leaf has acquired. First thought was to attempt to pack the hinges. Whip the bolts out thought I. When I put them in, I drilled pilot holes and liberally applied vaseline to the galvanised steel bolts. They were put in by hand with a socket and ratchet, not rammed in with an impact wrench. As you can see I have tried to remove two of the big top bolts, quite gently with a 1/2" socket and both snapped like cheese. Oak has eaten the bolts. Like it does.

Because the weight is too much for me, I didn't want to take the gates off - just loosen each hinge plate and pack. If I snap the remaining top two bolts, as is likely, then it will be four deep plugs to cut and replace (not easy), and it may not work as a solution.
I wondered about a straining wire pulling from top left to bottom right. Basically my question is has anyone trued up old gates like this that moved after several years. Recommendations please.
* The gates have withstood quite extreme weather (really heavy wind and wet - then 35C summer) and an incident with one of our roving travelling friends who somehow got confused about which drive he was entering and managed to get his arm trapped, leading to a sad hospital visit and some very nice close up portrait photos. However, this trauma didn't do irreparable damage to the gates unless he somehow moved a post when his brakes failed on his vehicle.