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Baldwin 0015102 Oil Rubbed Bronze Letter Box Plate - Rustic Mailbox Cover for Front Door, Perfect for Traditional & Farmhouse Style Homes
Baldwin 0015102 Oil Rubbed Bronze Letter Box Plate - Rustic Mailbox Cover for Front Door, Perfect for Traditional & Farmhouse Style Homes
Baldwin 0015102 Oil Rubbed Bronze Letter Box Plate - Rustic Mailbox Cover for Front Door, Perfect for Traditional & Farmhouse Style Homes

Baldwin 0015102 Oil Rubbed Bronze Letter Box Plate - Rustic Mailbox Cover for Front Door, Perfect for Traditional & Farmhouse Style Homes

$70.41 $128.03 -45% OFF
Color:
Satin Brass/Brown
Black
Oil Rubbed Bronze
Lifetime Satin Nickel
Lifetime Polished Brass

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Description

Designed for use on exposed doors to prevent wind from forcing rain and snow through the slot. Very large opening will accommodate small packages.

Features

    Designed for use on exposed doors to prevent wind from forcing rain and snow through the slot

    Very large opening will accommodate small packages

    The product is manufactured in China

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This is a really well-made, shiny, nice-looking, mail slot cover. As far as I can tell, it’s solid brass; it feels heavy and solid (compared to my old brass-plated cover) and a magnet won’t stick to it. It comes in a nice box with eight screws, which I guess are brass, too, and a matching frame-style brass plate (minus the center flap) for the inside of the door. There were no instructions in the box; I ended up making my own template to position the screws.It was put on the carved-out mail slot of a thick wooden door on a 1950s era house. The only thing about it is that the carve-out must be sufficiently large to accommodate the raising of the flap on the cover, because the top of the flap raises into the top of the carve-out. Like a swing-up garage door. Hope that makes sense.I initially bought the cover to cover the interior side of the mail slot to reduce drafts and bugs; however, the flap of the cover wouldn’t open properly without positioning the cover such that there would be a gap at the top. The carve-out on the door is curved at the corners and prevented the flap from flipping up.I don’t have the tools/capability to carve out more wood. Instead, I tried it on the exterior side of the door. I took off the old exterior brass-plated cover and found that this new cover would fit on the exterior of the door. The old cover, fortunately, easily fit the interior side. So, win-win. The better looking cover is on the exterior and the old cover is on the interior.One thing I really like about it is that it solidly and tightly springs closed with a little bang. There’s almost no draft, though there are two small air gaps in the upper left and right corners of the cover; and I doubt a roach could get through. In this respect, it worked out better that it’s on the exterior of the door.As I mentioned in the first paragraph, it does come with a matching, rectangular, frame-style, brass plate meant for the interior side of the door, but it has no flap so the center is wide-open. I like my door better with both sides having flapped covers.There have been no problems with mail delivery in having both sides fully-covered. In my case, the flap of the interior cover is really loose making it easy for mail/magazines to slide through.