I took off a hollow core interior door to paint it. Very thin coats (this is only the second time it's been painted since contractors built house. I know they only sprayed 1 very thin coat). Now the door doesn't seem to fit as well. I did new hinges -same size just different color. I know I can plane it for better fit but I want to know why the door doesn't fit right back in. The new coats of paint are not too thick so it's not the paint job. Ideas? I have more doors to redo so I want to avoid this problem again.
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3Were the hinges set properly? – Nov 25 '12 at 21:00
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Did you use long 3" screws on the hinges, or short ones that came with the hinges? – Steven Nov 25 '12 at 21:06
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4Any chance the door sat outside and was at a dramatically different temperature or humidity than the inside? – Kellenjb Nov 25 '12 at 21:56
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3Did you buy heavy duty (thicker hinges) than the originals? – mikes Nov 25 '12 at 22:05
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2You might be surprised how a couple of coats of paint can cause a close fitting door to bind. Where exactly is the door hitting the frame? – shirlock homes Nov 25 '12 at 22:07
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1Can you describe how big the gap/overlap is along each side of the door to the frame? – BMitch Nov 25 '12 at 22:17
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You say
The new coats of paint are not too thick so it's not the paint job.
and this is a common misconception. Yes, it looks like the paint is negligibly thin but it actually adds up. When a door is constructed it has size that allow for painting it once, maybe twice, and then a new layer of paint will prevent it from closing.
You should have cleaned the previous paint off the door edges.
sharptooth
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Since hollow core doors aren't made of the finest materials, is it possible that even your minimal amount of paint caused swelling? I could imagine that even just a bit of swelling over a 30 inch door width could cause it to jam.
Peter
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