Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Removing Tear Drop Type Door Pulls From a Philco 111 Hi-Boy
#1

I have a Philco 111 Hi-Boy cabinet with doors that needs restoring. Does anyone know how to remove the tear drop type door pulls from the doors of this cabinet?. Were the pulls installed with threaded screws inserted from the back of the door and then veneer installed over the rear of the door thereby hiding the heads of the screws? I'm almost certain the door pulls do not screw into the door panel but are held in place by regular machine screws. The problem is : How do I access the heads of these screws? Any help is welcome and most appreciated. Thanks .
Floyd
#2

My wife has a 111 highboy in her office where she works, but I have not attempted to remove the door pulls; therefore I'm afraid I can't really help you on this.

I suspect the heads of the mounting screws probably are hidden behind the veneer, but again, I am not sure about this.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

Ron,
Thanks for the reply. Perhaps a fellow radio collector will enlighten us on the correct procedure for removing the door pulls.
Floyd
#4

It doesn't make much sense to me that they would screw the door pull on and then veneer over the screw head, in general practice in cabinet making the ornamental hardware is the last thing to go on after finishing. It may be that they installed a captive nut to thread the pull into or the pull has wood screw type threads on it's back side that screw into the door panel. It there any evidence of small brad nails around the face of the pull?
Regards
Arran
#5

Arran,
Thanks for your input and comments. I don't see any brad or nail heads around the flanges of the door pulls. There is a possibility the pulls screw into a female captive insert as you mentioned. A friend of mine has suggested having the door x-rayed to ascertain exactly how the pulls are fastened to the door. That may be my next course to unravel this mystery. Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.
Regards,
Floyd




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Gloritone 27 Radio
I have a model 27 that someone painted the cabinet brown. I've been trying to sell it for awhile but the cabinet paint m...Jim Dutridge — 02:30 PM
Restoring Philco 96
Joseph Yeah. The situaction is complicated by me living with my family in NJ while mom is in FL. Were it not for my ...morzh — 10:55 AM
Restoring Philco 96
Best of wishes for your mother. I hope she recovers well. My mother struggles with sciatic pain as well, so I am familia...jrblasde — 10:41 AM
Restoring Philco 96
Well, because I am away, I cannot check it. Hope mom becomes better enough for me to get back. I think I will be here f...morzh — 10:27 AM
Restoring Philco 96
Nice find! I hope it completes your console.jrblasde — 08:45 AM
Gloritone 27 Radio
Hello john, That, is the first time I have have seen or heard of that brand and model. Welcome to the party !! Sincer...radiorich — 08:08 AM
370 Norman Bel Geddes trim pieces
Thank you! I’ll probably use the half-round molding and tone it to match the original. Thanks for the replies!Max T — 06:34 AM
Gloritone 27 Radio
I'm kind of late to this thread, but Buzz1151 has a 3 part restore series on the model 27: A little bit of extra t...Eliot Ness — 05:48 AM
370 Norman Bel Geddes trim pieces
You can get half-round moulding in various diameters at any home improvement store. That way the flat edge is uniform. ...GarySP — 12:03 AM
42-345 Resistors
Great comments. I have a tinkering bench at my office, and that's where Little Phil is right now. I will have to comb ...proftrussell — 11:12 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 1528 online users. [Complete List]
» 2 Member(s) | 1526 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatar

>