pren
Established Member
Hi.
I've been volunteered by my good wife to help out one of her friends. Her ex-husband decided to start 101 '5 min jobs' on their house before ditching her and the kids for a younger model, leaving most of the house in **** state for the last 2 years. Nice chap. :evil:
One job I'd appreciate some advice on is sorting out the window board in the bathroom. It's approx 30mm thick by 300mm deep by 1200mm wide. It's bowed upwards by around 15mm. I'm asuming this was caused by it being fitted too tightly into the space and the moisture has made it expand?
My plan of attack was to either remove it, take 5mm off either end to allow for expansion and replace it, screwing it down in the middle to flatten it, covering the gap with a flexi filler. Otherwise, do the same thing but with a new window board.
Does that sound right?
Also, the door linings in the house are out of square/true. The good man of the house got as far as removing all the doors and architraves in the house ..... and that's it. :roll: There's a curtain pinned across the bathroom doorway for privacy.
For this, I was intending on removing the door linings to reveal the brick/stud openings, replace the linings and shim/pack them out until plumb/level and then screw/nail them to the opening through the shims to avoid warping. The doors will then be hung from the linings and the stops fixed to the linings.
Sound about right? What is the proper sized timber to use for the linings/stops (by 'stops', I mean the section of timber planted on the lining to form a rebate in which the door sits - have I got the right term?) Also, do i need to make an allowance for movement in the timber?
It really hacks me off that someone can do this to their family. Marriages fail. I get that. But you take responsibility for your own actions! The tiles around the bath have been smashed up to fit the new bath - leaving jagged 'teeth' that the lady and her kids keep cutting themselves on. The sink is held up by the water pipes and the toilet can only be flushed by reaching into the cistern and lifting the flush valve! :evil:
I'm more than happy to help her out, I just want to make sure I get it right first time for her.
I've been volunteered by my good wife to help out one of her friends. Her ex-husband decided to start 101 '5 min jobs' on their house before ditching her and the kids for a younger model, leaving most of the house in **** state for the last 2 years. Nice chap. :evil:
One job I'd appreciate some advice on is sorting out the window board in the bathroom. It's approx 30mm thick by 300mm deep by 1200mm wide. It's bowed upwards by around 15mm. I'm asuming this was caused by it being fitted too tightly into the space and the moisture has made it expand?
My plan of attack was to either remove it, take 5mm off either end to allow for expansion and replace it, screwing it down in the middle to flatten it, covering the gap with a flexi filler. Otherwise, do the same thing but with a new window board.
Does that sound right?
Also, the door linings in the house are out of square/true. The good man of the house got as far as removing all the doors and architraves in the house ..... and that's it. :roll: There's a curtain pinned across the bathroom doorway for privacy.
For this, I was intending on removing the door linings to reveal the brick/stud openings, replace the linings and shim/pack them out until plumb/level and then screw/nail them to the opening through the shims to avoid warping. The doors will then be hung from the linings and the stops fixed to the linings.
Sound about right? What is the proper sized timber to use for the linings/stops (by 'stops', I mean the section of timber planted on the lining to form a rebate in which the door sits - have I got the right term?) Also, do i need to make an allowance for movement in the timber?
It really hacks me off that someone can do this to their family. Marriages fail. I get that. But you take responsibility for your own actions! The tiles around the bath have been smashed up to fit the new bath - leaving jagged 'teeth' that the lady and her kids keep cutting themselves on. The sink is held up by the water pipes and the toilet can only be flushed by reaching into the cistern and lifting the flush valve! :evil:
I'm more than happy to help her out, I just want to make sure I get it right first time for her.