Hi guys,
Hoping for some advice please. As part of my house renovations, I have removed the old door frames and casings and am replacing them with new frames on both solid walls and a couple of stud walls.
As my old ash block walls were all 2 inch, I've been using 2 inch (75mm) timber for the frames. I was advised to leave a gap of 2 inches bigger than the door I want to install. So for a 28inch door, my gap is 30inch and so on.
I plan on buy prebuilt door casings to fit in and pack till they are square. Firstly, is the 1 inch on either side enough? This would mean that the door casing at it's narrowest part would need to be no more than an inch.
Also, if I have 75mm timber, plus 2x 12.5mm plasterboard plus a little plaster, so is that works out to requiring a door casing that is approx 100mm wide.
Do all these dimensions sound okay to you? Am I okay carrying on like this. I know carpenters will make almost anything work, but I'm trying to save money and do it myself.
Thanks
Hoping for some advice please. As part of my house renovations, I have removed the old door frames and casings and am replacing them with new frames on both solid walls and a couple of stud walls.
As my old ash block walls were all 2 inch, I've been using 2 inch (75mm) timber for the frames. I was advised to leave a gap of 2 inches bigger than the door I want to install. So for a 28inch door, my gap is 30inch and so on.
I plan on buy prebuilt door casings to fit in and pack till they are square. Firstly, is the 1 inch on either side enough? This would mean that the door casing at it's narrowest part would need to be no more than an inch.
Also, if I have 75mm timber, plus 2x 12.5mm plasterboard plus a little plaster, so is that works out to requiring a door casing that is approx 100mm wide.
Do all these dimensions sound okay to you? Am I okay carrying on like this. I know carpenters will make almost anything work, but I'm trying to save money and do it myself.
Thanks