Door hinge pins and bushings
I noticed today that my drivers door has a little sag to it. Picked it up and had quite a bit of play. How hard is it to replace the hinge pins and bushings? What are the tools and steps to do this at home without paying a body shop to do it.
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I placed a floor jack under the bottom of the door with a heavy soft rag folded all kinds of ways to soften the pressure on the paint on the bottom edge of the door. I actually used a small, sharp chisel and cut the flattened ends of the old pins off. I believe the Dremel with cutting discs will be the way I attempt to replace my next ones though. Once BOTH pins were cut and removed the door was supported (teetering on) by the jack and by me and the old bushings pushed right out and the new bushings slid right into the holes as I carefully maneuvered two halves of the hinges together and got the door back into place and slid the hinge pins through the bushings. The pins had NO caps to secure to them and NO holes for cotter pins to keep them from traveling though. I will likely drill the next ones if they have no provisions for stopping the travel before installing them. Even though the pins were greased on installation that one lower pin still travels up over time. I have to take a small hammer every now and then and tap it back down. The passenger door isn't used much so I haven't noticed pin travel there yet.
I started with one and thought about passing on the other but I decided to dive right in and do both because you have to seperate the two sections of the hinges to replace the bushings. I believe I tried seperating the one hinge by itself and it binds up a bit and makes the area you have to try to manipulate and squeeze the bushing into real tight. Doing both made seperating the hinge sections and inserting the bushings a breeze.
Balancing the door wasn't too bad either because the floor jack did most of the work. The door jamb power wiring harness assisted in the stabilizing of the front of the door also. The floor jack also kept the hinge halves from binding when going back together and sliding apart because the door pretty much stayed at the height it was at throughout the entire process, and the window on the door was down throughout the replacement too.