No. I was referring to hardware like this. When you close the door it pulls it in and locks. To open, touch the door and it pops open. Another choice would be to put an astragal on the right door if there is room behind.
thanks for the replies, guys. I solved the problem with a ball catch at the top of each door. One to prevent the top of the left door from "pushing back" and one to pull and hold the right door flush with the left.
of course this is a "fix" and is not 100% but as I said, I just want to make it look right when the doors are closed. I don't necessarily care that it is not actually perfect. I'm bummed about that but it's something only I'll know.
I've had this happen with many of the doors I've made. In my case, it was because the door wasn't perfect flat to begin with. You can take it off and lay it on a perfectly flat surface (like a table saw) and see if it's flat or if it rocks.
What I did to make flatter doors:
Buy quartersawn wood if you can. Make sure you get dry wood and give it time to acclimate to your shop or house. Joint and plane it once just to square it up, then let it sit for a couple of days. Joint and plane again. After a couple more days, mill it to the final shape. I also discovered that a big part of my problem came from the way I was clamping it. Uneven clamping pressure can introduce a twist in the door that you won't see until it's hung. Switching to Bessy bar clamps helped a LOT. They keep things nice and flat. Also, make good joints so you don't need to overtighten the clamps to bring things together.
There are ways to minimize the possibility of twisting/warping. For those that are wanting to maintain some visual appearance and grain orientation, quarter sawn might not fit the project. For those in the business, they may not have the time to employ straightening methods, whereas an alternative to the problem might be fixed with some type of hardware.
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