View Single Post
  #19   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Harry K Harry K is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,044
Default Make the doorway higher.

On Oct 20, 4:38*am, ransley wrote:
On Oct 19, 10:12*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:





In article , ransley wrote:


On Oct 19, 4:46=A0pm, Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,


I would like to make this doorway higher to match the rest of the
doors in my house.


http://freeboundaries.com/raisethedoor.jpg


This is weight bearing wall so my plan is to build two temp walls on
either side of the door, lining up with the joists. Then take out the
header, the "ladder" piece (if I'm not mistaken), the two 2x4's that
the header is resting on, and then rebuild. Does that sound like the
correct plan?


Thanks!


Aaron


Im I blind, I dont see it load bearing anything, the 2 outside 2x4 you
leave inplace, they bear load, above the door bears no weight. I would
just raise it. If it was a few pole screw jacks and a 4x4 would be
easier than building support walls


Aaron -- pay no attention to Ransley. He has no idea what he's talking about.
The stud above the door absolutely *is* load-bearing.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


You are blind, the support is the 2 outer 2x4 that go to the ceiling,
the 2 inner that attach to the header above door support nothing, blow
up the photo and look, the ceiing joists are on the outer 2x4 that
wont even be removed to put in a taller door.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


You _do_ see those two joists running across the top of th door
opening, right??

Take out that one cripple stud and you have two unsupported joists in
a load bearing wall. Clues:

1: at least one of the joists has been spliced above the door.
2: The joists run at right angles to the wall.

Doug is correct - you don't know what you are talkign about.

Harry K