He's not talking about the door jamsSo he is dealing with too large a gap at the bottom of his door jambs and your solution is to cut more off the door jambs?!?!?!
You really should stay out of conversations you haven't got a clue about....

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He's not talking about the door jamsSo he is dealing with too large a gap at the bottom of his door jambs and your solution is to cut more off the door jambs?!?!?!
You really should stay out of conversations you haven't got a clue about....
but will need to do something about the door jams and door trim. Or just live with the gap, which I'm not inclined to do.
Anybody have an easy way to do that
Caulk it.....
So he is dealing with too large a gap at the bottom of his door jambs and your solution is to cut more off the door jambs?!?!?!
You really should stay out of conversations you haven't got a clue about....
He's not talking about the door jams![]()
3/16" or fuck off, HACK!!!That shue molding is also only about 9/16" thick which means if you left a 1/2 inch all the way around you're going to be perilously close to having a gap showing in places. A 1/4" inch gap between the new floor and the existing baseboards is plenty for expansion and contraction and then you have no issues with whatever you decide in terms of a shoe or a quarter round. Undercut undercutting the door jams and trim was the correct tactic because you can't put a shoe or a quarter round in that area.
Threshold idea is solid for filling that gap under the jambs, how many doors do you have in that area?
Threshold idea is solid for filling that gap under the jambs, how many doors do you have in that area?
I mean, it depends on what you want. There is always several ways to go about it. If you mask off a nice square line, and corners, fill it with caulking and maybe let it shrink and fill it again, it works too. I'm just crazy enough to drop the door jambs, but not clean my garage.I had the same situation with my door jambs when I replaced all the tile and carpet in my house with vinyl flooring.
Also left a gap under each door because the vinyl flooring was not as thick as the carpet and pad were. I didn't put thresholds at each doorway because I didn't want to stub a toe on them at night while walking in the dark. I caulked the gap around the door jambs and learned to live with the gap under the doors.
It's a smooth transition from every room in the house without the thresholds.
Our Roomba appreciates no thresholds....
I wish I were.People are sure are passionate about your project @outofyourmind
5 doors in the hallwayThreshold idea is solid for filling that gap under the jambs, how many doors do you have in that area?
1/4" is the norm around here, possibly because we have crazier humidity swings than you do but I'm just guessing on that.3/16" or fuck off, HACK!!!
That shue molding is also only about 9/16" thick which means if you left a 1/2 inch all the way around you're going to be perilously close to having a gap showing in places. A 1/4" inch gap between the new floor and the existing baseboards is plenty for expansion and contraction and then you have no issues with whatever you decide in terms of a shoe or a quarter round. Undercut undercutting the door jams and trim was the correct tactic because you can't put a shoe or a quarter round in that area.
There is a 2 part wood bleach that works good for stuff like that. Maybe even try a weak solution of bleach and water too. Test it out first in a small spot.I have some old water damage/pet pea spots that are darker.
I'll be trying Oxalic Acid to remove them.
It's the main ingredient in 'Barkeepers Friend'
1/4" is the norm around here, possibly because we have crazier humidity swings than you do but I'm just guessing on that.
I have watched some of those video's.There is a 2 part wood bleach that works good for stuff like that. Maybe even try a weak solution of bleach and water too. Test it out first in a small spot.
didja know you can use actual bleach on wood? crazy shit but it actually works to lighten the woodThere is a 2 part wood bleach that works good for stuff like that. Maybe even try a weak solution of bleach and water too. Test it out first in a small spot.
Never heard of it. Gonna have to look it upI have watched some of those video's.
Some people have used Hydrogen Peroxide.
The Oxalic Acid is amazing, at least in the video's, and easy.
That's what I just said.didja know you can use actual bleach on wood? crazy shit but it actually works to lighten the wood