I'm about to make a bunch of doors, we bought a 17th century house in bad repair and the large modern extension is full of crappy 1970s hollow hardboard doors that I want to replace. I plan on making the doors because the house is special and deserves a custom touch, having never made entry doors before (though I have made many cabinet doors) I am unsure about whether I should make the rail and stiles from solid kiln dried oak (approx 45mm - I would plane down some 65mm stock I have) or whether I should engineer the stock by laminating pieces together and thick veneering them? I understand the engineered doors would be far more stable but then they would be a lot more labour - how stable is Euro oak in solid single lengths? I was going to cope and stick them and then tenon them using my Domino XL so there should be plenty of construction bond once glued up.
Any experience or tips would be appreciated
EDIT: should add that I plan on making panel doors with flat solid panels. Probably 2 panels per door. I have a design in mind that I saw in a church vestry where the panels were diagonal beaded
Any experience or tips would be appreciated
EDIT: should add that I plan on making panel doors with flat solid panels. Probably 2 panels per door. I have a design in mind that I saw in a church vestry where the panels were diagonal beaded