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Thursday, July 27, 2006

Tearing A Door Down For Dummies

If you ever get caught in a situation, and pray to your God that you don't, where you find yourself stuck outside your locked door (because your LOLzheimer's yet again manifested itself when you forgot your keys somewhere you can't for the life of you remember) and you have tried all means possible to hopefully get it to open, skim along the texts and pictures on this post and Ctrl+D it for possible future reference.
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Recently, my bedroom door acted up and wouldn't let me in, for some weird reason. My homie, who I shall name Tupé (short for "Stupid," in reference to an old post that we shall leave buried in the archives), can only come up with the lamest possible suggestions so, yeah, thnks 4 th memrs (yeah FOB!) and thanks for trying to help. Thirty minutes later, all sweaty but still almost-model-like, I realized I had already exhausted everything I can think of:
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  1. looked around the door to try to know what its problem is, thinking that maybe the problem is THAT obvious, but it wasn't;

  2. used a knife on the door's hinge;

  3. tried using other keys that may possibly fit the keyhole;

  4. turned the knob to the hilt in opposite directions and timing a Herculean shove with each try;

  5. turned the knob in one direction and barged onto the center of the door (which only dented my shoulders and collar bones, methinks, so ouch!);

  6. considered climbing in from the outside through my bedroom window (but that would only get me trapped in the room since I will still face the same dilemma on either side);

  7. analyzed the construction of the doorknob if there are possible screws left out or openings anywhere so I could start dismantling the blasted object (and there were none for security reasons, bless those doorknob makers for at least seriously considering our safety); and

  8. tried asking for help (this one had to go since this thing happened a bit late in the evening and I hate my neighbors, to this very day, and they hate me back).


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Something did work in the end. Behold and be enlightened! (cue in chorus of angels' song here) I could even go so far as say that this post is going so helpful, you'd want to make this your home page! Done bookmarking? Atta boy-bastos! (SRY, that one's for the spiders. Now, carry on.)
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Prepare the ONLY thing you would ever need for this process: long-nosed pliers.
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[Please hover your mouse on an image for the corresponding instruction or refer below for an enumeration of the step-by-step procedure. Also, click on the pictures for a larger view.]
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1. Hold the pliers firmly with both hands on each of its rubber-gripped handles. Pull the handles at the same time on opposite directions such that the long steel tip opens at its widest.
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2. Position the pliers firmly (as shown on the image above) and pull the handle towards you with all the strength you have. Be careful though, the door knob might fall on your toes the moment it comes off. As a preliminary to this step, however, do an inverse pull-up by positioning the pliers with the handles pointing downward and the tip pointing upwards. This tends to loosen the door knob and would thus up your success rate with the "pull-down" procedure.
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3. Do Step 2 several times until the door knob gives.
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4. It would eventually fall off on your second try, or no more than the third try depending on the force you apply to the pliers.
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5. Remove loose parts from the hole the now-fallen door knob left.
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6. On one side of the now exposed hole of your door, a metal ring protects the "tongue" portion of the door knob that you would need to take out (pointing red hand is where the "tongue" I'm referring to is at). You would want to bend that ring in order to access the "tongue." Use your pliers. Should there be jagged metal edges in the opening where the "tongue" should come out of, use your pliers to bend the edges outward.
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7. Pull the "tongue" out with your pliers and gently push your door open.
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This process leaves minimal or no damage at all to your door if done with the highest level of cool and awesomez00rz! Worked twice for me.
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DISCLAIMER: The procedures outlined here are for educational purposes only. The author will not be liable should said procedures be used for purposes other than tearing down the door of your own room or house or for damages resulting from use of the the same. Although the process has been tested twice, it does not preclude 100% success when applied. Regular check-up and maintenance of your doorknobs still are the best way to prevent door emergencies from happening.
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At July 28, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Being a mongeloid who has the attention span of a five-year-old, seeing this line scared the shit out of me:

7. Pull the "tongue" out and gently push your door open.

Ouch!

Seriously, I'd rather go for the atm/credit card door opening technique, which proves to have 40% success rate in opening doors. =(

 
At July 28, 2006, Blogger Fritz said...

apparently, the frame protecting that part is so close to the door that not even a knife could go through. Tried that one, too. Sadly.

 

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