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John
 
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"calhoun" wrote in message
...



You can leave the new door intact and cut back siding first. Just lay out
level lines, the size of the complete door unit, from the RO center and

cut.
New door will fit into this new opening and be level. This is the best way
IMHO.


Won't this limit any adjustments if needed? The door will sit tight within
the cutback siding.

The problem I always have with therma tru is they are 1/2" taller then

most
other doors.



Yes, I've noticed that. I just removed the inside trim on the old door and
the drywall is tight to the top of the door casing so I've got no idea how
much room I have in there. I'll cut back the drywall an inch tomorrow and
find out. Would it be unusual for the door opening be framed so that it
would not fit the 1/2 inch difference??

-John





"John" wrote in message
news
Hi everyone, I'm about to replace an exterior door with a pre-hung

Therma
Tru door. One thing I'm not quite sure about is the trim on the outside

of
the new door. The old (current) door has thin ~ 2 inch outside trim that
the
painted clap board siding buts up against. The new door has much wider
outside trim.

What's the best way to deal with the clap-board siding? I was thinking I
might be able to nail back the siding, then use a circular saw to cut

away
the couple of inches of siding needed to fit the new door & trim.

Trouble
is, I won't know the exact placment of the door until it's in place,
leveled
& shimmed.

Now that I think about it, I might be able to remove the trim from the

new
door for the install, the replace after I cut back the siding? I hope

the
trim comes off. Sometimes this stuff is glued and staped so much that

both
sides get wreaked trying to remove just the outside trim.

Any advice would be appreciated. I've never replaced a hung door before.

-John