Features
- Comprehensive Package: this package comes fully equipped with essential components for instant application; The package includes 4 pieces of dial adjust door hangers in 2 types, 2 pieces for #1 and 2 pieces for #2, together with 8 pieces of screws, making the setup process hassle free and straightforward
- Galvanized Steel Material: our sliding cabinet door hardware is mainly made from primarily galvanized steel, offering high strength and resistance to wear and tear; This reliable material safeguards its longevity and ensures a smooth sliding experience for your closet doors without the need for constant maintenance
- Precise Size Specifications: the sliding door hardware kit provides 2 types of dial adjust door hangers, with the same outer wheel diameter of approximately 7/ 8 inch but varying offset widths of 3/ 8 inch and 1/ 8 inch respectively; The hole spacing is consistent for both types at about 2.25 inches/ 5.71cm; Please confirm the size information before purchasing
- Efficient Door Movement: features of our closet door hardware contribute to making your door slide effortlessly and silently, without annoying noise; This promotes a quiet atmosphere in your space, ideal for bedrooms and offices where noise minimization is crucial
- Versatile Application: the sliding door roller kit can be applied to a wide range of doors; Whether it's repairing your existing closet door or installing a new one, this set is the ideal solution, offering a balance of style and functionality
Related Tools
A four-piece sliding door hanger kit with two adjustable hanger types and eight mounting screws, intended for wardrobe, closet, and cabinet doors. The hangers are galvanized steel with a wheel outer diameter of about 7/8" (22 mm), offset widths of 3/8" and 1/8", and a hole spacing of approximately 2.25" (5.71 cm), designed to allow smooth, quiet sliding.
Yaocom 4 Piece Sliding Closet Door Hardware Rollers Wardrobe Cabinet Door Hangers Knob Adjustable Hooks with 8 Screws Review
Why I picked up these rollers
Closet doors are only as good as their hangers, and mine had started scraping and binding like a chair on gravel. I grabbed the Yaocom sliding door rollers because they offered two offset options in one kit, came with the hardware, and promised quiet, smooth movement in a straightforward package. After installing the set on two bypass closet doors and a small wardrobe, I’ve got a clear sense of where these rollers shine—and where they don’t.
What’s in the kit
The kit includes four hangers—two of each type—with eight mounting screws. The wheels are about 7/8 inch in diameter, the plates are galvanized steel, and both hanger types share roughly 2.25-inch center-to-center mounting holes. The difference between the two types is the offset (one sits about 1/8 inch from the plate, the other about 3/8 inch), which matters a lot for getting the door to ride correctly in its track and align with its mate.
That two-offset approach is the clever bit here: many older closets use mismatched or different-offset rollers for front and rear doors, and having both in one package increases your odds of a clean fit.
Build quality and design
These are light to medium duty hangers, appropriate for typical hollow-core or lightweight panel doors. The galvanized plates resist scuffs and corrosion, and the stamping is tidy without sharp edges or sloppy bends. The wheels track smoothly and don’t chatter. I’d categorize the hardware as “household-grade”: confidently made for interior use, not industrial.
The height adjustment is a dial/rotary-style cam that lets you fine tune the door’s position after mounting. The mechanism isn’t fancy, but it’s positive and repeatable—you can feel the increments as you nudge the door up or down. That’s useful for eliminating door rub and getting even reveals.
Installation experience
Swapping these in was quick:
- I removed the old rollers from the door top rail and used one as a physical template to confirm hole spacing.
- I chose the offset that matched the original hardware (front door needed the larger 3/8-inch offset; rear door took the 1/8-inch).
- I loosely installed the hangers with the included screws, hung the doors, then used the adjustment dials to fine tune clearance and alignment.
- Final step: I cleaned the upper track, vacuumed debris, and applied a light touch of dry silicone to keep things quiet.
The included screws seated well in both particleboard and softwood stiles. If your door rail is particularly soft or stripped from previous hardware, consider a slightly longer screw or a wood repair filler. Otherwise, the supplied fasteners are adequate for the job.
Total time per door: about 10–15 minutes, including removal, cleaning the track, and adjustment.
Sizing and compatibility: measure twice
The most important part of this purchase is matching your door system:
- Wheel diameter: These wheels are approximately 7/8 inch. Many common closet tracks use that size, but not all. Too large and the wheel may bind in the channel; too small and the door can rattle or derail.
- Hole spacing: About 2.25 inches. If your existing hardware’s holes are wildly different, you’ll need to drill new pilot holes.
- Offset: You get two offsets—roughly 1/8 inch and 3/8 inch. The offset determines where the wheel sits relative to the mounting plate, which affects how close the door sits to the track and how it overlaps with its partner.
If you don’t know your offset, pull one old hanger off and set it on a flat surface next to a ruler; you’re measuring how far the wheel centerline sits off the mounting plane. Matching that dimension (or being close enough for the adjustment dial to compensate) is the difference between an easy install and a frustrating one.
Performance: smooth and quiet
Once installed, the improvement was immediate. The doors rolled with a low, consistent glide—no grinding, and very little rumble even over small track imperfections. The wheels track quietly, and the adjustment dials let me eliminate light scraping where a previously bowed door rubbed the jamb. On a 48-inch bypass setup, the doors closed cleanly and met evenly without clacking.
Noise matters in bedrooms or offices, and this hardware delivers on the “quiet” promise. That said, a lot of the quiet comes from doing the other basics right: clean the track, re-seat any loose track screws, and make sure the door bottoms aren’t hitting a raised floor transition.
Where these rollers make sense
- Replacing tired, sticky rollers on standard bypass closet doors
- New installations on lightweight to medium doors where you want a simple, reliable hanger
- Situations where you’re not positive which offset you need—you’ll have both on hand
Where they’re not ideal:
- Heavy solid wood or oversized doors where a beefier hanger with higher load ratings is prudent
- Tracks that use a different wheel diameter or profile (some specialty systems require proprietary parts)
- Damp or exterior-adjacent spaces; galvanized steel holds up indoors, but I wouldn’t select these for environments with persistent moisture or salt air
Tips for a painless upgrade
- Confirm wheel diameter by measuring the old roller and the track channel width. A quick caliper or even a ruler check can save a return.
- Match the offset to your original hardware whenever possible. If you’re unsure, start with the larger offset for the front door and the smaller for the rear, then adjust as needed.
- Pre-drill pilot holes in older or brittle rails to prevent splitting.
- Clean the track thoroughly. Dust, hair, paint overspray, and drywall grit are responsible for half of the “bad roller” complaints I see.
- Use a dry lubricant (silicone or PTFE). Avoid grease—it attracts debris.
Durability outlook
After a few weeks of daily use, the rollers still glide cleanly with no sign of wobble or flat spots. Galvanized steel is a sensible choice for interior closet hardware—it’s strong enough for the job and shrugs off normal humidity. As with most light-duty rollers, long-term life is a function of track condition and door weight. Keep the track clean and the load reasonable, and these should last.
If your old hardware failed due to bent plates rather than worn wheels, consider whether your doors are too heavy for this style; that’s a sign to step up to a heavier-rated hanger.
Value
Getting four hangers and the screws in one kit is convenient and often more cost-effective than hunting down pairs. The inclusion of both offsets reduces guesswork and the chance of a mismatch. For standard residential closets, the price-to-performance is strong. You don’t get premium heft, but you do get smooth, quiet function with minimal fuss.
The bottom line
The Yaocom rollers hit the sweet spot for everyday closet and wardrobe doors: simple, quiet, and easy to install. Their two-offset kit is especially handy for older homes where you might encounter mixed hardware or unknown track specs. The key is doing your homework—measure wheel diameter, hole spacing, and offset—so you know they’ll fit your system. Install is straightforward, adjustment is precise enough to dial in clean reveals, and the day-to-day glide is pleasantly quiet.
Recommendation: I recommend these rollers for light to medium-weight interior sliding doors when their 7/8-inch wheel and 2.25-inch hole spacing match your existing setup. They’re a practical, good-value upgrade that restores smooth operation without drama. If your doors are unusually heavy or your track calls for a different wheel size or specialized profile, look to a heavier-duty or system-specific hanger instead.
Project Ideas
Business
Closet Door Repair & Upgrade Service
Offer a local service targeting homeowners and landlords to replace worn rollers, adjust tracks, and upgrade closet doors to quieter, smoother sliding action using these kits. Package options can include basic roller replacement, full tune-up (adjustments + lubrication + new fasteners), and aesthetic upgrades (new trim/paint). Low parts cost and short job times make this high-margin and scalable.
Precut Sliding Panel Kits for Small Spaces
Productize a DIY kit that includes pre-cut panels, the four-piece roller hardware, screws, simple instructions, and finishing options (paint, veneer). Market toward renters and tiny-home owners who want quick upgrades without carpentry skills. Sell on Etsy, Amazon Handmade, or your own Shopify store with up-sell options for custom sizes/finishes.
Hands-On Workshops & Pop-Up Classes
Run weekend workshops teaching participants to build a jewelry cabinet, media cover, or secret compartment using the roller kit. Charge per attendee and include the hardware as part of the ticket. Workshops can be hosted at makerspaces, community centers, or as corporate team-building events — also a good channel to sell kits afterward.
How-To Content + Affiliate Kit Sales
Create a content funnel (YouTube tutorials, short social videos, and downloadable plans) showing clever uses and installation steps for small sliding doors. Monetize via ad revenue, Patreon, and affiliate links to the exact roller kits and complementary materials. Use the content to drive sales of branded kits or consulting/installation services.
Creative
Narrow Sliding Jewelry & Accessory Cabinet
Build a slim wall-mounted cabinet with two or three shallow compartments and use the small galvanized rollers for front sliding panels. Inside, add velvet-lined trays, hooks for necklaces, and slots for rings. The compact wheels and quiet action make it ideal for bedside or bathroom installations where noise and space are concerns.
Hidden Sliding Compartment in Furniture
Create a secret panel inside a dresser or bookshelf that slides on the kit's rollers to reveal a stash compartment or charging station. Use the two offset widths to get a flush fit in narrow gaps. This is a subtle project that adds security and function to upcycled furniture.
Sliding Media/AV Cable Cover
Make a low-profile sliding cover for TV or media consoles that conceals cables, remotes, and routers. The galvanized hangers support lightweight panels that glide silently, keeping living rooms tidy without bulky cabinet doors. Use magnetic catches or simple latches for secure closure.
Mini Barn-Style Door Gallery
Construct a small-scale barn-door system to slide over a photo or art display — think layered frames that you can slide to reveal different prints. The small wheel diameter and adjustable offsets work well for framed panels, letting you create an interactive wall installation for home or studio.