just changing my doors in my house to flush fire doors, mainly just so the doors have a more solid feel than the hollow plywood doors that were on before. Anyhow I have a 2 foot wide airing cupboard and was going to change that too, to a flush door. I have a 2 foot 6 inch width plywood hollow door which I've changed and was wondering about using that on the airing cupboard? It would mean cutting 6 inch of the width and then fixing a new edge rail to it? Is it going to fall apart, is it worth the hassle?
Deanta make very good solid core doors,& fire doors,plus the have the largest lipping available on a door,16mm on all four sides.
Should be fine. Just remember to allow enough wood for hinges/locks/handles or knob fixings when infilling the hollow cuts.
It's not worth the hassle, no. And if fire regs are the predominant reason or whatever, then believe it or not but your airing cupboard door should be fire rated.
I looked at Wickes but they were to order and delivery only, in the end I bought one from Travis Perkins which is just around corner from me
Wickes and Travis are the same group along with City Plumbing, Benchmarx, Toolstation and many others.
Benchmark doors are not the same quality as wickes. I made that mistake. Strange as you think they would be