

I show the curbside door, which is the one I use all of the time. The driver's side door has the same sealing issues. The doors lock from the outside with cabinet locks, and slide locks to close/lock from the inside. There's no way to hold the door closed without locking a lock. Previously, the doors were offset so much that the doors stood nearly an inch out from the trailer. There were plastic spacers (removed these) under the hinges like the one I repurposed for the inside latch (see pic below). Some offset is needed though, since the inside of the door near the hinge is rubbing the door jamb. There was also foam weatherstripping on the door, too thick at the hinge and you could see not just daylight, but trees and grass through the gap latchside. I used olive oil and a lot of elbow grease to get the adhesive from the weatherstripping off of the door. Also, the inner door jamb is curved in a manner hard to describe in words - detailed pics of this are below. The bottom of the door seen here was cracked and ultimately broke, from my short legs reaching for the ground and putting pressure on it - put a sturdier board here. Again, difficult to describe in words. Lots of pics follow...
What I would like to accomplish follows the pics - Thanks for looking!
My doors as they are now - locks from the outside with a cabinet lock
Hinges - I am thinking perhaps I should replace these with the offset piano hinges
Inside Latch - There used to be plastic blocks under the hinges (too much offset) like the spacer seen on the slide latch in this picture.
Close up of repurposed spacer block
The gap latchside as it is now
Curved jamb - My doors close against an inner jam of very thin plywood. The exterior plywood is routed in a curve to the inner door jamb, resulting in a curved inner surface to attempt to seal. The thin weatherstripping here doesn't do much, but is the effort of a helper with good intentions, an excellent carpenter I might add, but with no rv experience. You can also see in a couple of these, that the inside of the door near the hinges is rubbing against the jamb.
Bottom of the jamb, board in place
Close up of the jamb, easy to see the curve in the jamb here
What I would like to have - Doors that seal properly - I have read many posts and am unsure how to go about this with the curved jamb. Would aluminum t-channel work without interfering with the curved jamb? Are the corner radii too tight on the door to bend aluminum channel? I am thinking I should I replace the existing hinges with an offset piano hinge from Grant. The curved jamb is giving me fits on envisioning a solution to this. Of course, the curve may not be a problem at all - it may be my head overthinking things, which I tend to do<grins>. An actual door handle that locks - not sure what sort of door handle will work with my doors and walls. It would be nice if it would simply close, rather than fussing with the slide latches inside every darn time. Not to mention, those cabinet locks don't seem like they would slow anyone down. It would be nice to be able to close the door without having to lock it every time.


PS No internet at my current parking space, my Momma's, but I will be checking in here every day or two. Thanks again!!!