yeah im a carpentry studend.. so i have somer questions, what tools would i need to dit the door lining i guess saw chiusles ect but im not shaw so its always best to ask haha
One thing that works good and makes it stronger is to get things set like you have and measure the space between the pressure treated and the jamb right where the strike plate is, then make an exact thickness shim about 6 or 8" tall to slip in between the jamb and the PT stud. That way you can use longer screws for the strike plate and it's stronger, less prone to flexing and breaking. Best best is one of those deep security strikes you bore a hole in the PT for on an exterior door.
The door carts/door dolly from doorkart.com remove most of the lifting involved in hauling a door for a door installation. You can also attach your hardware while the door is resting in the door cart.
Screws are removeable, which means the door is later without damaging the concrete. The pressure treated wood will not shrink in a basement. There's not enough heat present. The sealer they used in between there will be enough to flex and hold the frame tight. It's not a bad install at all.
dude shut up, he hung that door the right way. did it occur to you that maybe pressure treated wood is code in his area?.. take a fucking spelling class once in a while.. and shut your mouth you may learn something.
@fstwrtr Just the nature of contact with the lime in the concrete the PT is needed. Of course it's best to have aged and dried PT. You can substitute what was done in the past before PT and brush roof coating on the side of the 2x that contacts the concrete to act as a barrier between them, just like fence posts used to be dipped into creosote for the ground bury area to keep water and bugs from harming the wood. Code of not you need something to prevent the concrete from affecting the wood
You should try using ez hang brackets instead of shims its makes it all alot easier.
hpy2bld 2 weeks ago
α ετσι γινεται? μπραβο ρε παλικαρι
deafpowerranger 1 month ago
thanks :) nicely done
5SchinoCherries 2 months ago
yeah im a carpentry studend.. so i have somer questions, what tools would i need to dit the door lining i guess saw chiusles ect but im not shaw so its always best to ask haha
kingold786 2 months ago
u need to invest in a much better drill bt not a bad video
mfcman2k7 4 months ago
my basement is leaking, i got 2 ponds and 1 swamp in the cellar.
teebrron 4 months ago
One thing that works good and makes it stronger is to get things set like you have and measure the space between the pressure treated and the jamb right where the strike plate is, then make an exact thickness shim about 6 or 8" tall to slip in between the jamb and the PT stud. That way you can use longer screws for the strike plate and it's stronger, less prone to flexing and breaking. Best best is one of those deep security strikes you bore a hole in the PT for on an exterior door.
rhblakeman 8 months ago
very informative. Thank you
andresb3bravo 10 months ago
Thanks for the video...
DOLRED 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
The door carts/door dolly from doorkart.com remove most of the lifting involved in hauling a door for a door installation. You can also attach your hardware while the door is resting in the door cart.
umhalo0013 1 year ago
Comment removed
umhalo0013 1 year ago
thank you so much... i learned a lot...
tquibido 1 year ago
Screws are removeable, which means the door is later without damaging the concrete. The pressure treated wood will not shrink in a basement. There's not enough heat present. The sealer they used in between there will be enough to flex and hold the frame tight. It's not a bad install at all.
XavierHolland 2 years ago
dude shut up, he hung that door the right way. did it occur to you that maybe pressure treated wood is code in his area?.. take a fucking spelling class once in a while.. and shut your mouth you may learn something.
fstwrtr 2 years ago
@fstwrtr Just the nature of contact with the lime in the concrete the PT is needed. Of course it's best to have aged and dried PT. You can substitute what was done in the past before PT and brush roof coating on the side of the 2x that contacts the concrete to act as a barrier between them, just like fence posts used to be dipped into creosote for the ground bury area to keep water and bugs from harming the wood. Code of not you need something to prevent the concrete from affecting the wood
rhblakeman 8 months ago