How to inatall a door?
Related Discussions
How do I extend this door?
I have these wonderful old doors, they are the right width, too short. How do I make them work?
Closet doors for 95" tall opening
Hello everyone, I'm looking to update my closet doors to be bifold wooden doors, but strangely the opening of my closet measures to be 95" tall, and the current door... See more
How can I resize a screen door?
I got a very old screen door. It is made of 2x4's and put together with tongue and groove. How can I get it apart w/o tearing it up!
Need a quick temporary "door" for a hallway with a high ceiling?
I am looking to block the top of a staircase with a temporary door to keep cats out of the first floor. the problem I am having is that the ceiling is very high, 90"... See more
How do I go about putting new doors on a closet that ends at a wall?
This question has bothered me for a while. When we moved into our house the closets in the small upstairs bedrooms had cheap bypass doors on them. Needless to say, th... See more
Squeaky cabinet doors
I recently painted my kitchen cabinets and put on new hinges. They are now making an annoying squeak every time they're opened and closed. Would appreciate any advi... See more
The trick with doors is to make sure that the board on the HINGE SIDE of your door is perfectly level in every single way. Whether your installed a new door with frame and jam included etc. That part of your frame has to be perfectly level, you attach your door too it and then shim the rest of it all and attach the rest of the door (if your door came with its jam etc)
I have seen and known carpenters that have trouble with doors. First, you need to me if it is interior, or exterior? Are your walls plaster, or drywall? The door sold at the big box stores, usually do not have the correct jamb. The ones they sell are on a 4-9/16" jamb. Great if the house is new with 1/2" drywall on both sides. If it an exterior door, That jamb minimum will be a 5-1/4" jamb. But those stores will be on 4-9/16". Absolutely useless. They will tell you "you can extend the jamb". What they don't say is that that is for a professional, with all the tools. You are better off to hire a professional, and go to a regular lumber company, and let them order it from their mill work supplier.