I'm not quite sure which forum is right for this question.
All the room doors in our cottage are traditional, tongued and grooved, "ledged and braced" (like a garden gate and not framed). They all open inwards, hung using T-hinges screwed into the "ledges" (on the inside of the door). However, in a corner of our hallway we are adding a guest toilet, which for space and access reasons requires the door to open outwards into the hall. It would seem totally wrong to hang the door with the ledges and T-hinges in full view on the outside of the door. The hall-side of the door should be the uninterrupted tongued and grooved face.
So, should I use conventional door hinges, rebated into the door lining on one side and screwed into the endgrain of the ledges on the other (presumably with appropriate endgrain screws, and maybe some packing to reach the edge of the door)? But would this be sturdy enough? Alternatively, are there such things as cranked T-hinges (a bit like kitchen cabinet hinges), or should I crank back the T-legs myself (using a vice) so the remaining leg-lengths could be screwed as normal (but actually "back to front") onto the faces of the ledges on the inside of the door?
Any advice on this (or any other) way to hang this door would be greatly welcome.
All the room doors in our cottage are traditional, tongued and grooved, "ledged and braced" (like a garden gate and not framed). They all open inwards, hung using T-hinges screwed into the "ledges" (on the inside of the door). However, in a corner of our hallway we are adding a guest toilet, which for space and access reasons requires the door to open outwards into the hall. It would seem totally wrong to hang the door with the ledges and T-hinges in full view on the outside of the door. The hall-side of the door should be the uninterrupted tongued and grooved face.
So, should I use conventional door hinges, rebated into the door lining on one side and screwed into the endgrain of the ledges on the other (presumably with appropriate endgrain screws, and maybe some packing to reach the edge of the door)? But would this be sturdy enough? Alternatively, are there such things as cranked T-hinges (a bit like kitchen cabinet hinges), or should I crank back the T-legs myself (using a vice) so the remaining leg-lengths could be screwed as normal (but actually "back to front") onto the faces of the ledges on the inside of the door?
Any advice on this (or any other) way to hang this door would be greatly welcome.