Kudos to you for being able to hold the door with one hand and one foot while filming! this is more helpful than the other one I watched that took 3 people (one to film, one to hold the door, and one to place wood pieces under the door while hammering it into place).
This hinge looks almost exactly the same as the one on my 2020 Winnebago Intent motorhome. This solved my problem. I should've done this weeks ago. Thanks.
Thank you for the video; in my case it turns out I wasn't very observant (even more blatant in that I've lived in this home for 35 years), in that the door itself wasn't actually sagging. To my credit, my shower door isn't itself framed (though the enclosure has a frame) and is clear glass; guess if there was calcium build-up I would have noticed that the gap between the door and the frame were actually fine though the shower door still wouldn't close. The problem in my case was actually the door handle which had slipped such that it was coming away from the door and hitting the frame of the shower door. The handle is only attached to the glass door with friction, it is a symmetric "V" shape with the same shape inside as outside the door. I only had to "pull" the two handles apart to be able to move it back onto the door (i.e. towards the hinge) so it would clear the door frame. Also made a minor adjustment to the "roller" latch on the door frame where it would lightly contact the handle (which serves as the latch to the door). It was pretty easy, though it took me way too long to observe that the door itself had uniform gap, my problem was the handle/latch rather than being at the hinge end. Your video helped me focus on the gap, which was fine on my door, so I could revector my attention to the latch rather than the hinge. I had a conceptual issue that it had to be the hinge causing the symptom, where the problem was elsewhere, and it took me awhile to figure out due to my lack of observation of what was actually causing my symptom.
This shower door is exactly like how mine is set up. Thanks for the video. One off the honey do list. Tip. If you have thin wrenches it can save you some time from removing the top screws. My bottom one was calcium deposited tight so door came off anyway. I also used a small pry bar in the top and bottom of the gap to hold while tightening with fender wrenches. 10mm
Do you have a video or advice on how to stop the bottom corners from leaking? I have replaced the sweep but have water leaking at the base from both sides of the frame.
Hi. I have the same door, I installed this past weekend. The issues are as follows: 1. Closing side of door (top) is 1/8 above the strike jamb 2. Closing side (bottom) is about 1/8 inch from the bottom of the strike jamb. 3. Whenever I make adjustments to the nuts at the pivot jamb side it doesmt make a difference. Thanks for any advice.