Google Inclined Door Design                                                                                      Back to Homepage                  

          If you have a problem closing your dish holder because the magnets are already damaged, I have a simple solution to that. Tilt it slightly backwards by inserting a little something on the front foot (Google Inserts). This position will keep the door of your dish holder closed. You can do the same for refrigerators (plugged or unplugged in good condition or not) whose magnets are also loose or damaged.  Installing a tilted or inclined door could keep your door closed even without a door knob or the noisy door closer. Actually, even the slightest, unnoticeable inclination would already work. The inclination must start from the bottom up, going backwards. This can be done by inclining the outer part, meaning the thickness, of the door jamb, but the door jamb itself is vertical in form and 
installation. The top and bottom ends of the door, the thickness, must be perfectly perpendicular against the top and bottom parts of the door jambs, respectively. The above are also applicable to windows and the corresponding window jambs. In the future we can use a custom made Google Door Jambs, and Google Doors, Google Emergency Exit Doors, Google Windows, Google Emergency Exit Windows, Google Gates, Google Emergency Exit Gates (and all others), Google Cabinets, Google Dish Holders, and Google Refrigerators which doors would no longer need any magnets for closure (Read Here, Important(Read Here, Important). The inclinations of all of the above are best achieved using a custom made Google Hinges. I hope this Google article is helpful to you.