Door Gap problem

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5 Feb 2014
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I have hung a door and despite the gap being perfect when pre hung and the hinges cut in nice and flush the gap is massive.

I must be doing something wrong? The hinges don’t close up right so I can’t see how I can avoid a gap.

Sure I am being thick.



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You need to rotate one of the wings so it sits flush with the other and refit so it looks like a T rather than a wedge. It's filpped the wrong way currently
 
that’s what I thought but I can’t seem to change it
 
These look to be the only two ways
 

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Hard to tell but I think you have the wrong hinges. Both wings should be the same shape and butt up to each other. I think you may have a 90 degree hinge or something as the wings look a different size and shape. Did you buy them or something you have already.

I think those hinges are designed to go on a corner rather than in the door jamb so one wing sits on the face which you don't want
 
I suspect that you may have fitted the "hinge", correctly called a "butt" the wrong way round. They are designed such that when the door is closed the screw leaves lie totally flat against one another but they will only do this one way - take one off and try closing it one way then the other and you will see what I mean. Also of course both the door edge and the architrave must cut with a chisel to a depth equal to the thickness of the butt leaf such that they fit flush with the timber.
Yours truly, an expert door hanger.
 
Not rebated enough, open then to parallel and then measure the gap between the hinge flaps, divide by two and that's the rebate death per door. The gap between the two parallel plates will give you the clearance for the door to open. Front doors have this type of hinge to allow for swelling.

Also You have not fitted the door jamb , hence the gap seems oversize.

When fitting doors i find it easier to pin the door jamb down the centre line and fit the door to that, use plastic packer wedges to centralise the door to the jambs and off the floor and then mark up the rebate depth of the hinges.
 
That looks like it might be a fire door hinge, maybe? Fire door hinges are designed to give you a 3mm gap between the jamb and the door. This is to accommodate the intumescent strip.

As others have said the hinge needs to be chopped in to both the door and the door casing by the thickness of the hinge leaf, but you can reduce the gapping around the door by chopping the hinge leaf in slightly deeper on the inside. This cannot be done readily with a router - it requires a hand chisel and a bit of judgement.

Traditionally hinges were chopped in to give a 2mm gap all round - any less and your door will become "hinge bound", meaning it won't close fully. Modern hinges often assume a 3mm gap as this is the standard for fire doors
 

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