I'm trying to convince a friend to buy a Blaze King, most likely a Princess or King. The door-opening direction (hinge on the left, latch and handle on the right, is almost a show-stopper for him). BK tells me that a custom version of the stove is not going to happen. So I'm exploring the possibility of a field modification, and it seems pretty do-able to me. (I'm not interested in discussion of is this really necessary, or just being told that it's a stupid idea).
The door itself seems absolutely reversible - nothing about it seems like it'd be a problem. The catch (on the stove body) seems straightforward as well; it is simply a piece of partially-threaded rod, bent at a right angle, and bolted into a hole in the stove body.
It's the pieces attached to the stove body (is "boss" the correct term ?) that seem to be an issue.
They're simply small protrusions, with short pieces of rod sticking upwards, that the door slips into. It seems that they could simply be cut off the stove body, probably with a angle grinder, and then welded back on to the stove body on the other side of the door aperture. The main problem seems to be that their re-attachment must be very-precisely positioned, in all three dimensions: distance from the side of the door aperture, vertical position relative to the door aperture, and perhaps most critically, distance protruding from the front of the stove (since this will impact the quality of the gasket seal when the door is closed).
So my main question: would a reasonably competent welder be able to pull this off ?
The door itself seems absolutely reversible - nothing about it seems like it'd be a problem. The catch (on the stove body) seems straightforward as well; it is simply a piece of partially-threaded rod, bent at a right angle, and bolted into a hole in the stove body.
It's the pieces attached to the stove body (is "boss" the correct term ?) that seem to be an issue.
They're simply small protrusions, with short pieces of rod sticking upwards, that the door slips into. It seems that they could simply be cut off the stove body, probably with a angle grinder, and then welded back on to the stove body on the other side of the door aperture. The main problem seems to be that their re-attachment must be very-precisely positioned, in all three dimensions: distance from the side of the door aperture, vertical position relative to the door aperture, and perhaps most critically, distance protruding from the front of the stove (since this will impact the quality of the gasket seal when the door is closed).
So my main question: would a reasonably competent welder be able to pull this off ?