Been in construction over thirty years, these days I’m mostly a trim carpenter. I bought a set of the door stud and absolutely love them. No more fighting or damaging the door to set it. Well worth money spent. Keep up the good work Matt
I don’t see why it wouldn’t work on split jam doors, I haven’t installed one though. As with installing any door there is always some fiddling to do either because of poor framing to much mud on drywall and many others, the door stud is just a tool to help you so your not fighting it. I have used the clips they sell so no shimming is needed and I’m not quite sold on them. The door feels flimsy, after the casing is installed you can still move the jam back and forth
As a trim carpenter in new construction for over 20 years, I've been patiently waiting for your finish vids brother. The things I see here make me happy ;)
I bought a set of Door Studs a year ago.... one of my best purchases since I work alone. I have even installed solid core 6' double doors with them no problem
I have done a few projects with Gilbert many moons ago he's one of the best cabinet and carpenter guy I have ever met good to see my buddy doing what he does best custom homes!!
We made some homemade door wheel thingys to do the doors on our house back in, uh, 1987? Just made them from 2x4, screwed together, with a hole and nut. Even had the shelf for the level.
The author does like to from scratch, th-cam.com/users/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. As another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us don’t have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we won’t be able to practise the full stack project, is still great.
The fact that he had a piece of cardboard under his nail gun to not risk damaging the door says everything about what type of carpenters you hire. Well done
I agree but I’m more than sure he pays the framing crew more than good. I can’t tell you how many builders want top quality attention to details but only want to pay the bare minimum. You get what you pay for.
@@ykciR 100%. Where I rented years ago my landlord was horrible. She would do the same. Wanted first class service but paid for coach. She would get the most botched jobs on plumbing and work around the house. I’m like are you kidding me?! These people aren’t professional plumbers these are handymen! Hell they’re not even handymen. That’s an insult to them. Just dudes she found on Craigslist lol
EZ-Hang Door kit, is another brand This was a rush job 3 guys less than 8 hours. Did 15 doors installed less than a day. Did last five or so in less than 15minutes each. All were trimmed and caulked ready for the painter the next day. $150 tip from the home owner.
Think you're onto something, pretty much getting a free new house with all these sponsors. I'm currently saving up for new doors and Jeld-wen looks like they will be the ones I get.
Anyone in the Austin housing market in 20 to 30 years, keep an eye out for this house. Matt will have to sell at a price that is close to the other houses around his, but due to all of the freebies he's gotten from this series, it will be one of the best built houses with more bells and whistles at that price.
I was just wondering what this house would cost to build if he had to buy everything! At least double, maybe triple the typical house in the neighborhood.
Like most viewing this, I've done my share of creating and/or building plus hauling by myself to 2nd floors the heavy items like sheetrock, doors, windows, etc. Any tool to save the back and energy level is appreciated and like others pointed out...surprised no one else thought of this in the past. Kudo's for inventing this device. What is arguably a concern is that it took at least getting to 11.30 minutes in to the video to get an explanation and instead listen to hype and a sale pitch for the doors selected and the source. I watched out of curiosity over the tool not the doors!
The next time I hire a GC or any tradesmen, I plan to state: " *I* *am* *shooting* *a* *Before-and-After* *Renovation* *Video* *for* *my* *youtube* *channel.* *Can* *I* *interview* *you* *and* *show* *your* *work-in-progress?!?* " . . . Perhaps that will cause them to do the job right the first time!
Unfortunately, most homeowners only care about low cost and don't want to pay for detail work. They truly think the low bid will have the same QC as the high bid.
Wow thats a awesome door tool! I need one of those. I rehab foreclosures and doors usually are getting changed. I have 20 right now in one project. A must have for me!
Besides the benefits of sound on solid core doors for me as a fire fighter is controlling fire and giving you a little more time. Time is a big plus and peace of mind as long as your doors are closed.
Those install kits are freakin AWSOME! Worth the money. And the wheel thing would be handy if you do more than one door a year kind of thing or whole house for DIY.
Thanks for all your videos Matt. Love all the info you share, especially working for a residential builder myself. Your home is looking great and I can’t wait to implement some of your detailing on my upcoming build. Best of luck the rest of the way!
@@Josh.1234 I've never had a problem with them. If you had a very heavy door you could throw in a few shims and screw too. I just find I get my doors more level and perfect gaps
Daniel - how do you put the door trim on with the bracket and the screw now being on the face of the drywall? Do you rout out the back of the casing where the brackets are? Do you let it run out an extra 1/8 inch and caulk the gap from top to bottom? Do you have to order doors with jambs that account for the extra 1/8 inch on each side? (1/4 inch total additional)
@@VC-Toronto nope, it actually just lays flat over it. I always caulk and seams with my trim work before I spray it but it's def not needed. When I do flips sometimes I install prefinished trim instead of painting in place and they look fine
This type device has been around for more than 30 years. I made my own copying from a set I saw on a job site1985 while I was in the business of installing commercial doors. Even works on store front doors. Mine is one piece instead of having to keep up with matched set.
Similar to a tool that piano movers use. The tool piano movers use, fits on the corners of furniture. You crank up the furniture, and then you can easily move the piano/furniture
I am still waiting for someone to cover how you get the door slab flush to the finish jamb... the ideal finish is flush, but I don't how the cavity slider system allows for micro adjustments where the finish jamb and edge of the pocket door meet... usually there is allways some micro adjustment required to achieve this.
@@Josh.1234 i do screws and shims to be safe, the kit helps get it up and straight, quickly.. You are going to nail trim to it, so its not going anywhere even without the screws and shims added. I have replaced trim in houses, where they only used finish nails to install doors...😳. They lay the door down, nail trim to one side, push door into opening with trim against drywall, and then nail trim to the other side! All the doors just fell out when you went to remove trim... none of them closed properly, but they still "functioned". Held only in place by finish nails...
@@triggeredtroll6466 haha well I am not sure about relying on trim to stabilize it. Solid core doors and kids who like to slam them will loosen that up over a decade or two. I would have to have shims and long screws at each hinge and at the strike to feel comfortable.
Damn, that is one good idea for us sawdust makers. Okay, eggbox doors are light but some of the old Victorian era doors are made in heavy solid timber. Hope to see these on sale on this side of the pond 🤞😁 all the best Matt with your rebuild. Karl
You know, for trim, I like just square rectangle trim and butted instead of mitered. I did it in a customer's house that's the way she wanted it and it looked really good. So I done it in my kitchen and the wife really loves it so do I.
That Door Stud product looks amazing, you can tell its quality built. As a DIY'er that rarely has to hang a door, I can't justify, but if I had to hang doors frequently, man I would definitely want one! Any chance of getting them into the Tool Rental section of some Big Box stores? That would be cool.
Even storing doors "on edge" can lead to cupping in the door across the face. Falls under "That Would Be Bad". Less likely than leaning them tall. But you're still leaning them.
The door stud is a marvelous invention. It's problem: Anyone who sees it will think "I can make that myself with a little bit of wood and some screws and casters".
Killing me. I just hung two prehung Jeldwin, and even though I kept them locked/closed and the opening was square and level, it took me forever to get the door hung right and swinging right. Like an hour on the first and 20min on the second. Need some of those tools and tabs for the next time.
In order for any manufacturer to warranty an interior door all six sides and any routed areas including hinge routes must be painted. Not just bathrooms. In Florida we use fiberglass for all of our exterior doors so it is not as necessary to pant the top or bottom.
It really does help. I never believed it until I stayed at my brothers house for a few days and he has solid core doors compared to my ''paper'' doors ! Huge noise difference.
solid wood doors make a huge difference to noise dampening between rooms i have done both and the builders grade hollow core doors are like having a curtain compared to solid doors when it comes to sound when i was younger never needed help to hang any door even 3 foot wide 8foot high solid oak doors those door dollies sure would be something i would use now lol
Matt serious question: Why do builders build such HUGE houses? The average family size has gone down by almost 1 person per household over the last 50 years but the new house size has more than doubled in the same period. When people talk about expensive houses they seem to forget houses use to be much smaller. I can’t help but feel housing would be much more affordable if the sizes built were actually in line with the amount of people that would live in them.
Frank Lloyd Wright used to design fairly small houses in order to encourage people to get outside. This was before HVAC was common in the "everyman's" house. Now people try to stay in the conditioned air as much as possible and feel they need the room to do the stuff people used to do outside inside.
@@HandlebarWorkshops Please list some outdoor activities that you do inside your house. My house would have to be the size of a mall for me to do what I do outside.
Hey Matt. I mostly watch your show for a while. Quenstion: Why you guys in the USA doesn’t put finished painted doors? Instead of painting them on site? It’s not better to be finished on a factory? Best regards! Alexandre Lucas from Portugal!
@@ArthurDentZaphodBeeb He's building it big enough for his family and their needs. Building a giant house where the walk in closets for each bedroom is the size of a average bedroom wouldn't fit into his neighborhood. I see nothing lacking in his house. His attention to details is what is going to make his house fit perfectly for him and his family.
I wonder how much of this pre-fab stuff is being installed by trimmers now. Never even came across this here In Ontario Canada, always routing jambs and doors ourselves and hanging with shims and a 16 ga nailer. I find the pre-routed stuff is not very precise
Who makes the door jam that you can pop in and out with the "biscuit" allowing you to change the pocket door easily? That's ingenious and I want to see if my contractor can do that for our cavity sliders.
12:20 door stop is not fastened and I am not surprised that it even happens on expensive custom doors. Never ceases to amaze me at the lack of care or QC at door manufacturers
You must be new here. Dude uses and recommends all LVL studs, for example. Paid 450 grand for an empty lot, plus whatever it cost him to tear down the house that was on it. No sense of budget or proportion.
Great presentation. I am wondering how the combination of the Door Stud plus those packet of door install clips work vs. a product called JAMBMASTER which offers very similar install features (except with the latter product you still have to use shims). Anyone who has done a comparison feel free! I have 15+ interior doors to upgrade in our home and am exploring purchasing the right tool.
can you add a link to those door frame clips? All the ones I have been able to find only attach to one side not straight through like the ones used here... Great video... like normal
Been in construction over thirty years, these days I’m mostly a trim carpenter. I bought a set of the door stud and absolutely love them. No more fighting or damaging the door to set it. Well worth money spent. Keep up the good work Matt
I can see how these work on a flat jam door but do they work with a split jam door?
I don’t see why it wouldn’t work on split jam doors, I haven’t installed one though. As with installing any door there is always some fiddling to do either because of poor framing to much mud on drywall and many others, the door stud is just a tool to help you so your not fighting it. I have used the clips they sell so no shimming is needed and I’m not quite sold on them. The door feels flimsy, after the casing is installed you can still move the jam back and forth
As a trim carpenter in new construction for over 20 years, I've been patiently waiting for your finish vids brother. The things I see here make me happy ;)
I bought a set of Door Studs a year ago.... one of my best purchases since I work alone. I have even installed solid core 6' double doors with them no problem
I have done a few projects with Gilbert many moons ago he's one of the best cabinet and carpenter guy I have ever met good to see my buddy doing what he does best custom homes!!
el trabaja en dallas tambien?
At what cost per hour did he come ???
We made some homemade door wheel thingys to do the doors on our house back in, uh, 1987? Just made them from 2x4, screwed together, with a hole and nut. Even had the shelf for the level.
The author does like to from scratch, th-cam.com/users/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. As another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us don’t have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we won’t be able to practise the full stack project, is still great.
The fact that he had a piece of cardboard under his nail gun to not risk damaging the door says everything about what type of carpenters you hire. Well done
It’s sad that that’s even a surprise, everyone should take great care with everything they do. But yes I agree, it’s awesome to see
I agree but I’m more than sure he pays the framing crew more than good. I can’t tell you how many builders want top quality attention to details but only want to pay the bare minimum. You get what you pay for.
@@ykciR 100%. Where I rented years ago my landlord was horrible. She would do the same. Wanted first class service but paid for coach. She would get the most botched jobs on plumbing and work around the house. I’m like are you kidding me?! These people aren’t professional plumbers these are handymen! Hell they’re not even handymen. That’s an insult to them. Just dudes she found on Craigslist lol
@AJ XOXO because it’s skill, it’s physically demanding, you have to work in the heat and in the cold, it’s a more dangerous job.. should I keep going?
Well done ,more like well paid .!
That door stud device is the cleverest thing I've seen all week, and I look at a lot of "cool new tools" videos.
Jim is Kool and stands behind his product!
I have a set of the OG Door Studs, I never touch a door hang job without them!
EZ-Hang Door kit, is another brand
This was a rush job 3 guys less than 8 hours. Did 15 doors installed less than a day. Did last five or so in less than 15minutes each. All were trimmed and caulked ready for the painter the next day. $150 tip from the home owner.
"I'm over here in your daughter's bedroom", he better be the last man that says that or we will be seeing Matt's guide to hidden basement doors.
Was thinking pretty much the same thought.
Lol omg I was focusing on something else and was like whattt.. and had to see what was going on, not what any father wants to hear
@@AnN-py2em I was washing dishes with this in the background and had to stop and double check what the heck
Matt probably knows how to make "concrete shoes" :-)
Exact thing i clicked to type 😆
Think you're onto something, pretty much getting a free new house with all these sponsors. I'm currently saving up for new doors and Jeld-wen looks like they will be the ones I get.
I bought 2 sets for commercial door installs paid for themselves the first job 100% worth the money! 👍🏼👍🏼
Anyone in the Austin housing market in 20 to 30 years, keep an eye out for this house. Matt will have to sell at a price that is close to the other houses around his, but due to all of the freebies he's gotten from this series, it will be one of the best built houses with more bells and whistles at that price.
Yep, at least 90% of the house was free
I was just wondering what this house would cost to build if he had to buy everything! At least double, maybe triple the typical house in the neighborhood.
You don’t sell that house
Isn't that true of any builder's home? Um probably.
Like most viewing this, I've done my share of creating and/or building plus hauling by myself to 2nd floors the heavy items like sheetrock, doors, windows, etc. Any tool to save the back and energy level is appreciated and like others pointed out...surprised no one else thought of this in the past. Kudo's for inventing this device. What is arguably a concern is that it took at least getting to 11.30 minutes in to the video to get an explanation and instead listen to hype and a sale pitch for the doors selected and the source. I watched out of curiosity over the tool not the doors!
My new house I just built, all interior doors are 8' tall (12' ceilings). I will NEVER go back to small doors again!
Might as well build all doors to be wide enough for a wheelchair if you plan to be there long enough.
Glad you have the funds to build such a big house with all the best materials.
40 doors! Wow. Never thought about it, but there are many doors counting closets.
What a house you have Matt. 👌🏻
Man….I wish the GC’s I worked with had this level of care, respecting and innovation….
The next time I hire a GC or any tradesmen, I plan to state: " *I* *am* *shooting* *a* *Before-and-After* *Renovation* *Video* *for* *my* *youtube* *channel.* *Can* *I* *interview* *you* *and* *show* *your* *work-in-progress?!?* " . . . Perhaps that will cause them to do the job right the first time!
Unfortunately, most homeowners only care about low cost and don't want to pay for detail work.
They truly think the low bid will have the same QC as the high bid.
Wow thats a awesome door tool! I need one of those. I rehab foreclosures and doors usually are getting changed. I have 20 right now in one project. A must have for me!
Besides the benefits of sound on solid core doors for me as a fire fighter is controlling fire and giving you a little more time. Time is a big plus and peace of mind as long as your doors are closed.
Always, Always, Always great products, install tips, and thorough explanations of all content.
Thx Matt !
Those install kits are freakin AWSOME! Worth the money. And the wheel thing would be handy if you do more than one door a year kind of thing or whole house for DIY.
They'd be handy even once a year.
Matt, I love the “inventor” tool highlight
So many good nuggets of info in here.
The garage door slopes gonna warp his nicely stacked doors.
Thanks for all your videos Matt. Love all the info you share, especially working for a residential builder myself. Your home is looking great and I can’t wait to implement some of your detailing on my upcoming build. Best of luck the rest of the way!
Those door clips are how I install my doors, so easy and fast. I need to get some of those rolling feet things though!
Strength compared to screws through the door frame?
@@Josh.1234 I've never had a problem with them. If you had a very heavy door you could throw in a few shims and screw too. I just find I get my doors more level and perfect gaps
@@dangraves25 uniform gaps can be a pain at times so if it helps that I'm very interested
Daniel - how do you put the door trim on with the bracket and the screw now being on the face of the drywall? Do you rout out the back of the casing where the brackets are? Do you let it run out an extra 1/8 inch and caulk the gap from top to bottom? Do you have to order doors with jambs that account for the extra 1/8 inch on each side? (1/4 inch total additional)
@@VC-Toronto nope, it actually just lays flat over it. I always caulk and seams with my trim work before I spray it but it's def not needed. When I do flips sometimes I install prefinished trim instead of painting in place and they look fine
Love the video! But all the door heights are different. This would drive me nuts. The door looks so tiny with the taller ceilings
Never get over the fact that this guy put his 3 boys in the same bedroom 🤯
Any job that requires a new tool is a good job.
This type device has been around for more than 30 years. I made my own copying from a set I saw on a job site1985 while I was in the business of installing commercial doors. Even works on store front doors. Mine is one piece instead of having to keep up with matched set.
Similar to a tool that piano movers use. The tool piano movers use, fits on the corners of furniture. You crank up the furniture, and then you can easily move the piano/furniture
I have set doors and fixed badly hung doors for years, and racked my brain for something like that. AWESOME tool.
That video-editing is getting better and better. Well done!
I am still waiting for someone to cover how you get the door slab flush to the finish jamb... the ideal finish is flush, but I don't how the cavity slider system allows for micro adjustments where the finish jamb and edge of the pocket door meet... usually there is allways some micro adjustment required to achieve this.
nothing better then a clean job site
They have those install a door kits at home depot, they are amazing
I have 14 to replace and I will be trying those
Any worry that it won't be as strong a hold as having longer screws going through the jamb, through shims and into the framing?
@@Josh.1234 you still are recommended to do that for a screw on the top hinge. I plan on doing one screw for each hinge. Important on heavier doors
@@Josh.1234 i do screws and shims to be safe, the kit helps get it up and straight, quickly.. You are going to nail trim to it, so its not going anywhere even without the screws and shims added. I have replaced trim in houses, where they only used finish nails to install doors...😳. They lay the door down, nail trim to one side, push door into opening with trim against drywall, and then nail trim to the other side! All the doors just fell out when you went to remove trim... none of them closed properly, but they still "functioned". Held only in place by finish nails...
@@triggeredtroll6466 haha well I am not sure about relying on trim to stabilize it. Solid core doors and kids who like to slam them will loosen that up over a decade or two. I would have to have shims and long screws at each hinge and at the strike to feel comfortable.
thanks for the vid. There's DIY and then there's doing things the right way with the best products. I learn a lot from your channel.
Ok , that door roller thingy is genius !
As they say, necessity is the mother of invention.
What a great tool.
Pocket doors looking great, Matt! 🙌
Damn, that is one good idea for us sawdust makers. Okay, eggbox doors are light but some of the old Victorian era doors are made in heavy solid timber.
Hope to see these on sale on this side of the pond 🤞😁 all the best Matt with your rebuild. Karl
I’m positive this dude has never broke a sweat or done anything himself 😂😂😂 nothing but talk
"My small, 2800 sqft home". quote of the day.
You know, for trim, I like just square rectangle trim and butted instead of mitered. I did it in a customer's house that's the way she wanted it and it looked really good. So I done it in my kitchen and the wife really loves it so do I.
That door stud tool is so clever. Wrestling doors into place while trying to level them out can be miserable. Will definitely be purchasing that tool.
$230 ... good if you have a bunch of them to do, but too much for the occasional install..
Somebody did a pick a boo... on your intro!!! Great video Matt! Thank you for sharing all your knowledge!
Looks awesome! Let me know if you ever need a tub, shower, or sauna :)
Hey Matt, do you have videos going over the floorplan of your house and do's don'ts when designing a home?
That’s a lot of trim going into that house bud! 👌😁 pretty cool video.
It's the details that can make a custom home so much better than a giant tract house.
That Door Stud product looks amazing, you can tell its quality built. As a DIY'er that rarely has to hang a door, I can't justify, but if I had to hang doors frequently, man I would definitely want one! Any chance of getting them into the Tool Rental section of some Big Box stores? That would be cool.
They have a DIY set of Door Studs on closeout now (for 1 3/8" doors)
Hope they have fast shipping, lol.
First time in history a father was happy to hear a grown man say, “I’m here in your daughters bedroom.”
I designed a proto type bracket like that back in 86, still working on my doors.
Even storing doors "on edge" can lead to cupping in the door across the face.
Falls under "That Would Be Bad".
Less likely than leaning them tall. But you're still leaning them.
LMAO
On your pocket doors you using slow self closer ,does same thing as cabinet drawers . I like the trim video 👍
The door stud is a marvelous invention. It's problem: Anyone who sees it will think "I can make that myself with a little bit of wood and some screws and casters".
Killing me. I just hung two prehung Jeldwin, and even though I kept them locked/closed and the opening was square and level, it took me forever to get the door hung right and swinging right. Like an hour on the first and 20min on the second. Need some of those tools and tabs for the next time.
In order for any manufacturer to warranty an interior door all six sides and any routed areas including hinge routes must be painted. Not just bathrooms. In Florida we use fiberglass for all of our exterior doors so it is not as necessary to pant the top or bottom.
Not gonna lie. I like those door bracket things.
Very cool product for installing doors.
In the uk you must put fire doors upstairs,love you video.
Hung doors for years never needed door dollies but the clips for the jambs look cool
Skeptical on doors helping sound when there is good gap at the bottom
It really does help. I never believed it until I stayed at my brothers house for a few days and he has solid core doors compared to my ''paper'' doors ! Huge noise difference.
solid wood doors make a huge difference to noise dampening between rooms i have done both and the builders grade hollow core doors are like having a curtain compared to solid doors when it comes to sound when i was younger never needed help to hang any door even 3 foot wide 8foot high solid oak doors those door dollies sure would be something i would use now lol
Well done Matt! It's coming along so nicely! (I spy some of your Halo Interra Insulation kicking about too😎)
Matt serious question: Why do builders build such HUGE houses?
The average family size has gone down by almost 1 person per household over the last 50 years but the new house size has more than doubled in the same period.
When people talk about expensive houses they seem to forget houses use to be much smaller. I can’t help but feel housing would be much more affordable if the sizes built were actually in line with the amount of people that would live in them.
Frank Lloyd Wright used to design fairly small houses in order to encourage people to get outside. This was before HVAC was common in the "everyman's" house. Now people try to stay in the conditioned air as much as possible and feel they need the room to do the stuff people used to do outside inside.
@@HandlebarWorkshops Please list some outdoor activities that you do inside your house.
My house would have to be the size of a mall for me to do what I do outside.
Way cool invention; house is looking fab!
Must be really easy to hang doors when the openings are square and the studs are not leaning in different directions. REAL WORLD.
Hey Matt.
I mostly watch your show for a while.
Quenstion:
Why you guys in the USA doesn’t put finished painted doors? Instead of painting them on site?
It’s not better to be finished on a factory?
Best regards!
Alexandre Lucas from Portugal!
Brilliant presentation! TYou!
Did he really say little bitty 2800 square foot house?
In Texas, 2800 sf is pretty small for a custom.
Yeah, when he is showing homes on his channel with basement basketball courts, 2800 sq/ft is tiny.
@@ArthurDentZaphodBeeb He's building it big enough for his family and their needs. Building a giant house where the walk in closets for each bedroom is the size of a average bedroom wouldn't fit into his neighborhood. I see nothing lacking in his house. His attention to details is what is going to make his house fit perfectly for him and his family.
You should be used to this by now, nothing on this channel is ever realistic...he doesn't work on homes worth less than 1M
I was looking for this comment. He's obviously trolling us peasants watching.
I wonder if you can use that door stud tool on an inswing entry door with threshold. Just take the bottom weatherstrip off maybe
I wonder how much of this pre-fab stuff is being installed by trimmers now. Never even came across this here In Ontario Canada, always routing jambs and doors ourselves and hanging with shims and a 16 ga nailer. I find the pre-routed stuff is not very precise
"I'm over here in your daughter's bedroom"
PHRASING!
Lol "I'm over here in your daughters bedroom"
Where do you put bathroom vents in an airtight house? Straight through the wall? What product for that?
Who makes the door jam that you can pop in and out with the "biscuit" allowing you to change the pocket door easily? That's ingenious and I want to see if my contractor can do that for our cavity sliders.
12:20 door stop is not fastened and I am not surprised that it even happens on expensive custom doors. Never ceases to amaze me at the lack of care or QC at door manufacturers
that is a really handy invention
Great for hanging heavy commercial doors in the knock down frames.
Great stuff!
Awesome!! Just what I needed. Thanks
I'm not convinced that the door stud is faster than the traditional shim method
4D doors? Physics is wonderful!
Oh man. Matt used the high voice
I have never in my 30 years of installing doors needed that tool or another person to help hang a door.
Watch that fin snap in next 2 years
I bought the door stud pro to replace some metal doors at a condo it was a breeze to remove and replace doors using this great item
Where to find those install a door bracket kits? Anyone have a link? I googled, amazon'd, etc., but couldn't find them.
Nice informative video.
great build
my little 2800 sqft house ... dude needs a reality check.
He trolls often.
You must be new here. Dude uses and recommends all LVL studs, for example. Paid 450 grand for an empty lot, plus whatever it cost him to tear down the house that was on it.
No sense of budget or proportion.
Great presentation. I am wondering how the combination of the Door Stud plus those packet of door install clips work vs. a product called JAMBMASTER which offers very similar install features (except with the latter product you still have to use shims). Anyone who has done a comparison feel free! I have 15+ interior doors to upgrade in our home and am exploring purchasing the right tool.
Wow set's doors like that
can you add a link to those door frame clips? All the ones I have been able to find only attach to one side not straight through like the ones used here...
Great video... like normal
Excellent tool!!!
I still like German interior doors more because they close agaist a rubber seal on the top and sides.
Oh wow!!!!!
HI,
What would it cost to have this door installed?
$200?
$400?
Little😂😂😂😂 2800 sf is huge!