That s where your problem is.
My door is hinge bound.
This forces the door closer to the jamb at the lock edge.
A door that is difficult to close and tends to spring open is said to be hinge bound.
It could be that the screws are a bit proud but more likely the hinges are simply malformed slightly such that they won t close flat.
If you can t find where the door is binding open the door and hold a sheet of paper in various places in the joint.
If you see either the binding is probably related to the hinges.
Weighing it down may also be necessary.
If your door binds at the hinges squeals during closing or stops almost immediately when pushed to close the hinges are the culprit.
When the door has swelled place shims in the inner edge of the hinge mortise as shown in figure 7 6.
The normal procedure is to scribe the door and plane to the line with a power planer preferably a porter cable model 126 spiral cutter.
Test the hinge on the latch side a door is cut at a slight bevel to make it easier to close.
Restore a warped door to its normal shape by removing it and laying it flat.
You can usually see whether it is just one hinge or the door itself that is binding.
And if the hinge pins do not bend the door should then operate satisfactorily.
Sooner or later when the door is closed on the paper it gets trapped.
You can t pull it out.
Door that is hard to close.
If not it s a fairly easy task to bend it a bit if it s a standard samped sheet metal hinge and not cast.
Generally when correctly fitted the hinge flaps should be flush with the surface of the wood.
Tighten or shim hinges if door still binds on hinge side if lubricating the hinge doesn t solve the problem completely but you still suspect the hinges might be the issue try visually inspecting the door jamb and adjacent wall area for any paint or varnish from your door.
Could be one of several problems.
Same on the edge.
You can remove the screws from one side and see if the hinge closes flat then.
First open the door and check the hinge mortises.
Spray them liberally then open and close the door so the oil.
In a real world they should be flush with the surface of the jamb and set in 1 and 1 2 inches.
The problem is usually caused by hinge recesses cut too deep in either the door edge or in the frame.
Each hinge should be shimmed equally to prevent the door from becoming hinge bound.