siggy_7
Full time tool collector, part time woodworker
I've got a couple of door building projects to tackle. The first is to replace a rotten 3' door on a brick shed; having never made doors before I'm starting with this one as the final item isn't required to be cosmetically or dimensionally perfect so will make good practice. I've already bought some fairly green larch to do this with, and reasonably happy that I know roughly what to do.
Once I've had the practice, I'm planning to make a pair of doors to go on the back of my garage, for a new opening which will be somewhere around 7'6 to 8' wide. This opening will be in place of the main source of natural light in the garage as it stands, so I'm going to make them with some glazing in the top section. Design-wise I'm not planning anything too extravagant (braced M&T frame with TGV cladding in-fill) but I'd like to make them in something like Iroko to give a smart looking finish. A friend made himself a painted front door recently from kiln-dried ash, and has had a fair few problems since with joints failing etc. When he asked around he was advised that he shouldn't have used kiln-dried wood because of the subsequent swelling and used something a bit greener. Is this common practice amongst those who do exterior joinery for a living, and if so how do you source the timber? All the hard wood suppliers I know of only supply air or kiln dried in most species, Iroko included.
Once I've had the practice, I'm planning to make a pair of doors to go on the back of my garage, for a new opening which will be somewhere around 7'6 to 8' wide. This opening will be in place of the main source of natural light in the garage as it stands, so I'm going to make them with some glazing in the top section. Design-wise I'm not planning anything too extravagant (braced M&T frame with TGV cladding in-fill) but I'd like to make them in something like Iroko to give a smart looking finish. A friend made himself a painted front door recently from kiln-dried ash, and has had a fair few problems since with joints failing etc. When he asked around he was advised that he shouldn't have used kiln-dried wood because of the subsequent swelling and used something a bit greener. Is this common practice amongst those who do exterior joinery for a living, and if so how do you source the timber? All the hard wood suppliers I know of only supply air or kiln dried in most species, Iroko included.