Of space under the door.
Recommended space between bottom of interior door and floor.
Each room except for bathrooms and kitchens should be equipped with its own cold air return duct for proper heating and cooling distribution.
That is a lot of room for unlevel you have there.
He says this is too much and wants me to remove the door cut the bottom of the jam off and reinstall.
I installed an interior door in a new not lived in yet home.
It has a protruding edge centered on the bottom that fills the gap between two different floors.
If a room is not equipped with a cold air return it should then have a transfer air grill installed between the room and adjacent hallway which may already have a cold air return.
There are another 10 doors to hang and it will take too long if i do this.
Unlike interior doors gaps between a front door and a frame must go with the standards not so much due to the possible expansion of a leaf but because of the danger of penetration of cold air and extraneous.
Either way it gives you about 3 4 clearance over the finished floor.
Check to see if your door will close over it by placing a small piece of it on the floor under the.
Allowing a gap at the bottom of a door cannot support proper airflow.
I have never seen a door set with that big of a gap unless it was to get past floors that were not level.
When the owner stood back he noticed a gap at the bottom of 1 1 4 in.
If you are hanging a door on a finished floor you cut 3 4 off the bottom of the jamb then install.
I put the flooring in first then installed a pre hung door.
Usually setting the doorjambs on scraps of 3 8 to 1 2 in thick trim will put the door at the correct height.
Find out the thickness of the finish floor and then calculate where the bottom of the door will be.
Between a leaf of interior doors and the floor it is required to leave a gap of at least 2 2 5 cm to provide natural ventilation.
The standard i use is 1 2 over finish floors 3 4 is acceptable.