• @AtomOP
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    53 days ago

    I picked up a piece of hardwood that was 5/8 inch thick. Just measure the gap under your door so you know how tall the threshold can be. I went with a 3.5 inch width to cover the floor’s expansion gap with room to spare. I just cut that down to the width of the door. Then I used a router to put a 45 degree chamfer on all 4 sides.

    The 45 degree angle goes down about half way, I just ran a scrap piece through the router and progressively raised the bit until the angle felt right, then did it on the final one.

    Gave it a light sanding to remove any splinters and then I just stained it to match the floor and used a rubber mallet to get it in place. It’s pressure fit, so it’s a little tight to hold it in place. Some people opt to screw them into the floor below instead.

    • @The_v
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      43 days ago

      Dropping a few brads/nails into it to hold it into place is a good idea. As time goes by, wear and expansion/contraction of the flooring will have it popping out.

      I picked up an airgun to put in 2 1/2" finishing brads on the floors I did (engineered hickory). Turned the air pressure up to the maximum the gun was rated for (150psi) and sunk the brads into the board

      • @AtomOP
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        13 days ago

        That’s a good idea, thanks!

        • @The_v
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          23 days ago

          I also hope you did 5+ coats or so of polyurethane or shellac on it. Jams tend to take a beating. The slight rise means that everything hits them. I had to learn that one the hard way.