How can I repair this sagging gate door without replacing it completely?












2














This gate is rubbing up against the wall of this house, and the locking mechanism is on the incorrect side of the post where the lock is and now the gate will not correctly open. I think the problem is just that the gate is sagging. How would you go about a cheap fix? I think I just need something on the bottom of the gate to slightly raise it. It looks like there is already something there that was supposed to serve this purpose, but it is not raising it enough. I have circled that piece in red. Perhaps I just need one that is longer, but i don't know what the name of that piece is. Can anyone help me?enter image description here



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question






















  • amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
    – Kris
    2 days ago










  • A $52 wheel? cool.
    – C Fella
    2 days ago


















2














This gate is rubbing up against the wall of this house, and the locking mechanism is on the incorrect side of the post where the lock is and now the gate will not correctly open. I think the problem is just that the gate is sagging. How would you go about a cheap fix? I think I just need something on the bottom of the gate to slightly raise it. It looks like there is already something there that was supposed to serve this purpose, but it is not raising it enough. I have circled that piece in red. Perhaps I just need one that is longer, but i don't know what the name of that piece is. Can anyone help me?enter image description here



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question






















  • amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
    – Kris
    2 days ago










  • A $52 wheel? cool.
    – C Fella
    2 days ago
















2












2








2







This gate is rubbing up against the wall of this house, and the locking mechanism is on the incorrect side of the post where the lock is and now the gate will not correctly open. I think the problem is just that the gate is sagging. How would you go about a cheap fix? I think I just need something on the bottom of the gate to slightly raise it. It looks like there is already something there that was supposed to serve this purpose, but it is not raising it enough. I have circled that piece in red. Perhaps I just need one that is longer, but i don't know what the name of that piece is. Can anyone help me?enter image description here



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question













This gate is rubbing up against the wall of this house, and the locking mechanism is on the incorrect side of the post where the lock is and now the gate will not correctly open. I think the problem is just that the gate is sagging. How would you go about a cheap fix? I think I just need something on the bottom of the gate to slightly raise it. It looks like there is already something there that was supposed to serve this purpose, but it is not raising it enough. I have circled that piece in red. Perhaps I just need one that is longer, but i don't know what the name of that piece is. Can anyone help me?enter image description here



enter image description here



enter image description here







fence






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 17 at 19:27









C Fella

1177




1177












  • amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
    – Kris
    2 days ago










  • A $52 wheel? cool.
    – C Fella
    2 days ago




















  • amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
    – Kris
    2 days ago










  • A $52 wheel? cool.
    – C Fella
    2 days ago


















amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
– Kris
2 days ago




amazon.com/Caster-Rubber-rating-Spring-Loaded/dp/B00NU5IMMU.
– Kris
2 days ago












A $52 wheel? cool.
– C Fella
2 days ago






A $52 wheel? cool.
– C Fella
2 days ago












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














I would purchase a kit that has a steel wire and turnbuckle setup attach to the hinge side top left and the bottom right, some of the kits have turnbuckle the wire rope clamps and brackets to screw into the frame work for under 20$. These kits will allow you to tension the gate and remove the sag. You will need to adjust the latch but without the sag the gate would swing normally. Link not working right but Google ace gate anti sag kit 13.99$






share|improve this answer































    1














    You need a turnbuckle. Aquire one roughly the length of the gate's width, and install it from upper left to lower right on frame members. Tighten to lift. If necessary, extend it with some lightweight chain, stiff wire or cable.



    I see that there's a notch in the gate that should correspond to the brick ledge. This fix should bring that back into position, eliminating the rubbing issue.






    share|improve this answer





















    • The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
      – C Fella
      Dec 17 at 20:04






    • 1




      You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
      – isherwood
      Dec 17 at 20:31










    • @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
      – FreeMan
      Dec 17 at 21:02



















    0














    The upstairs doors in my house all got to sagging like that. The hinges looked fine but in fact had come loose. The wood of the door jamb was soft and use had wiggled the screws loose. For sure your jamb is soft too. I bet the same has happened with your gate. In fact it looks as though the top hinge has either been replaced or moved - there are two holes from the old hinge position visible in the photo. Maybe whoever did that fix is the one who hung it back with the latch on the wrong side.



    hinge holes



    Here is an easy thing to try. Prop up the far end of the gate so you don't have the whole weight of it on just one hinge when you unscrew the other. Unscrew one of the hinges from the support post, pack a bunch of long splinters or toothpicks in the screw holes to make it snug, then screw it back on. Repeat with other hinge. If that works, that's your answer.



    The second time I had to do that in the house I filled the holes with these hole anchors:
    hole anchor
    source
    the idea being the anchor would not compact and loosen the way the soft jamb wood did. So far so good.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.


















    • yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
      – C Fella
      Dec 18 at 5:27










    • The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
      – Willk
      Dec 18 at 19:11










    • the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
      – C Fella
      2 days ago











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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    I would purchase a kit that has a steel wire and turnbuckle setup attach to the hinge side top left and the bottom right, some of the kits have turnbuckle the wire rope clamps and brackets to screw into the frame work for under 20$. These kits will allow you to tension the gate and remove the sag. You will need to adjust the latch but without the sag the gate would swing normally. Link not working right but Google ace gate anti sag kit 13.99$






    share|improve this answer




























      2














      I would purchase a kit that has a steel wire and turnbuckle setup attach to the hinge side top left and the bottom right, some of the kits have turnbuckle the wire rope clamps and brackets to screw into the frame work for under 20$. These kits will allow you to tension the gate and remove the sag. You will need to adjust the latch but without the sag the gate would swing normally. Link not working right but Google ace gate anti sag kit 13.99$






      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2






        I would purchase a kit that has a steel wire and turnbuckle setup attach to the hinge side top left and the bottom right, some of the kits have turnbuckle the wire rope clamps and brackets to screw into the frame work for under 20$. These kits will allow you to tension the gate and remove the sag. You will need to adjust the latch but without the sag the gate would swing normally. Link not working right but Google ace gate anti sag kit 13.99$






        share|improve this answer














        I would purchase a kit that has a steel wire and turnbuckle setup attach to the hinge side top left and the bottom right, some of the kits have turnbuckle the wire rope clamps and brackets to screw into the frame work for under 20$. These kits will allow you to tension the gate and remove the sag. You will need to adjust the latch but without the sag the gate would swing normally. Link not working right but Google ace gate anti sag kit 13.99$







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 17 at 19:40

























        answered Dec 17 at 19:34









        Ed Beal

        30.5k12144




        30.5k12144

























            1














            You need a turnbuckle. Aquire one roughly the length of the gate's width, and install it from upper left to lower right on frame members. Tighten to lift. If necessary, extend it with some lightweight chain, stiff wire or cable.



            I see that there's a notch in the gate that should correspond to the brick ledge. This fix should bring that back into position, eliminating the rubbing issue.






            share|improve this answer





















            • The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
              – C Fella
              Dec 17 at 20:04






            • 1




              You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
              – isherwood
              Dec 17 at 20:31










            • @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
              – FreeMan
              Dec 17 at 21:02
















            1














            You need a turnbuckle. Aquire one roughly the length of the gate's width, and install it from upper left to lower right on frame members. Tighten to lift. If necessary, extend it with some lightweight chain, stiff wire or cable.



            I see that there's a notch in the gate that should correspond to the brick ledge. This fix should bring that back into position, eliminating the rubbing issue.






            share|improve this answer





















            • The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
              – C Fella
              Dec 17 at 20:04






            • 1




              You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
              – isherwood
              Dec 17 at 20:31










            • @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
              – FreeMan
              Dec 17 at 21:02














            1












            1








            1






            You need a turnbuckle. Aquire one roughly the length of the gate's width, and install it from upper left to lower right on frame members. Tighten to lift. If necessary, extend it with some lightweight chain, stiff wire or cable.



            I see that there's a notch in the gate that should correspond to the brick ledge. This fix should bring that back into position, eliminating the rubbing issue.






            share|improve this answer












            You need a turnbuckle. Aquire one roughly the length of the gate's width, and install it from upper left to lower right on frame members. Tighten to lift. If necessary, extend it with some lightweight chain, stiff wire or cable.



            I see that there's a notch in the gate that should correspond to the brick ledge. This fix should bring that back into position, eliminating the rubbing issue.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 17 at 19:31









            isherwood

            44.7k453115




            44.7k453115












            • The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
              – C Fella
              Dec 17 at 20:04






            • 1




              You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
              – isherwood
              Dec 17 at 20:31










            • @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
              – FreeMan
              Dec 17 at 21:02


















            • The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
              – C Fella
              Dec 17 at 20:04






            • 1




              You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
              – isherwood
              Dec 17 at 20:31










            • @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
              – FreeMan
              Dec 17 at 21:02
















            The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
            – C Fella
            Dec 17 at 20:04




            The package comes with 2 brackets. Do I need to install the bracket in the top left corner? Or can I just loosen up the screw that is currently there, wrap the wire around it, and tighten? Because I am not sure how I would install the 2nd bracket with the hinges right there.
            – C Fella
            Dec 17 at 20:04




            1




            1




            You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
            – isherwood
            Dec 17 at 20:31




            You can attach it any way you like. It's not critical as long as it's solid.
            – isherwood
            Dec 17 at 20:31












            @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
            – FreeMan
            Dec 17 at 21:02




            @CFella depending on the shape of the bracket, you could attach it to the vertical 2x just below the top hinge. In the very top corner would be ideal, but sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.
            – FreeMan
            Dec 17 at 21:02











            0














            The upstairs doors in my house all got to sagging like that. The hinges looked fine but in fact had come loose. The wood of the door jamb was soft and use had wiggled the screws loose. For sure your jamb is soft too. I bet the same has happened with your gate. In fact it looks as though the top hinge has either been replaced or moved - there are two holes from the old hinge position visible in the photo. Maybe whoever did that fix is the one who hung it back with the latch on the wrong side.



            hinge holes



            Here is an easy thing to try. Prop up the far end of the gate so you don't have the whole weight of it on just one hinge when you unscrew the other. Unscrew one of the hinges from the support post, pack a bunch of long splinters or toothpicks in the screw holes to make it snug, then screw it back on. Repeat with other hinge. If that works, that's your answer.



            The second time I had to do that in the house I filled the holes with these hole anchors:
            hole anchor
            source
            the idea being the anchor would not compact and loosen the way the soft jamb wood did. So far so good.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.


















            • yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
              – C Fella
              Dec 18 at 5:27










            • The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
              – Willk
              Dec 18 at 19:11










            • the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
              – C Fella
              2 days ago
















            0














            The upstairs doors in my house all got to sagging like that. The hinges looked fine but in fact had come loose. The wood of the door jamb was soft and use had wiggled the screws loose. For sure your jamb is soft too. I bet the same has happened with your gate. In fact it looks as though the top hinge has either been replaced or moved - there are two holes from the old hinge position visible in the photo. Maybe whoever did that fix is the one who hung it back with the latch on the wrong side.



            hinge holes



            Here is an easy thing to try. Prop up the far end of the gate so you don't have the whole weight of it on just one hinge when you unscrew the other. Unscrew one of the hinges from the support post, pack a bunch of long splinters or toothpicks in the screw holes to make it snug, then screw it back on. Repeat with other hinge. If that works, that's your answer.



            The second time I had to do that in the house I filled the holes with these hole anchors:
            hole anchor
            source
            the idea being the anchor would not compact and loosen the way the soft jamb wood did. So far so good.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.


















            • yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
              – C Fella
              Dec 18 at 5:27










            • The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
              – Willk
              Dec 18 at 19:11










            • the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
              – C Fella
              2 days ago














            0












            0








            0






            The upstairs doors in my house all got to sagging like that. The hinges looked fine but in fact had come loose. The wood of the door jamb was soft and use had wiggled the screws loose. For sure your jamb is soft too. I bet the same has happened with your gate. In fact it looks as though the top hinge has either been replaced or moved - there are two holes from the old hinge position visible in the photo. Maybe whoever did that fix is the one who hung it back with the latch on the wrong side.



            hinge holes



            Here is an easy thing to try. Prop up the far end of the gate so you don't have the whole weight of it on just one hinge when you unscrew the other. Unscrew one of the hinges from the support post, pack a bunch of long splinters or toothpicks in the screw holes to make it snug, then screw it back on. Repeat with other hinge. If that works, that's your answer.



            The second time I had to do that in the house I filled the holes with these hole anchors:
            hole anchor
            source
            the idea being the anchor would not compact and loosen the way the soft jamb wood did. So far so good.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            The upstairs doors in my house all got to sagging like that. The hinges looked fine but in fact had come loose. The wood of the door jamb was soft and use had wiggled the screws loose. For sure your jamb is soft too. I bet the same has happened with your gate. In fact it looks as though the top hinge has either been replaced or moved - there are two holes from the old hinge position visible in the photo. Maybe whoever did that fix is the one who hung it back with the latch on the wrong side.



            hinge holes



            Here is an easy thing to try. Prop up the far end of the gate so you don't have the whole weight of it on just one hinge when you unscrew the other. Unscrew one of the hinges from the support post, pack a bunch of long splinters or toothpicks in the screw holes to make it snug, then screw it back on. Repeat with other hinge. If that works, that's your answer.



            The second time I had to do that in the house I filled the holes with these hole anchors:
            hole anchor
            source
            the idea being the anchor would not compact and loosen the way the soft jamb wood did. So far so good.







            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 18 at 1:16





















            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            answered Dec 18 at 1:02









            Willk

            1013




            1013




            New contributor




            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





            New contributor





            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






            Willk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.












            • yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
              – C Fella
              Dec 18 at 5:27










            • The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
              – Willk
              Dec 18 at 19:11










            • the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
              – C Fella
              2 days ago


















            • yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
              – C Fella
              Dec 18 at 5:27










            • The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
              – Willk
              Dec 18 at 19:11










            • the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
              – C Fella
              2 days ago
















            yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
            – C Fella
            Dec 18 at 5:27




            yeah I noticed those holes before. Not sure I want to try the toothpick thing. Going to get the turnbuckle
            – C Fella
            Dec 18 at 5:27












            The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
            – Willk
            Dec 18 at 19:11




            The good thing about the toothpick trick is you don't have to buy anything. If you snug up the screws and it lifts the gate, you are done. If you snug up the screws and it does not lift the gate, you have done no harm. Buy the turnbuckle then.
            – Willk
            Dec 18 at 19:11












            the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
            – C Fella
            2 days ago




            the doors in your house are all one peice of wood. The doors would not be the thing that is sagging so it would obviously be the hinges. I know that is not the case here. The wooden door is sagging, not the hinges.
            – C Fella
            2 days ago


















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