When I did get the door back, it looked OK on the surface, but the bottom edge didn't look right so I tried to bend it back into shape and to put the twist into it with the wood. To my surprise and horror (particularly given how much the repair cost), the front of the door started to crack and I discovered that it was covered in quite a thick layer of body filler (bondo). I've now stripped this off to reveal a very poor repair that I'm going to have to re-do. Lesson learnt!
More pictures and tips on the stage 3 build to follow, but for now, I have a question. I've temporarily hung a door so that I can locate the front door pillar. I'm following TCFE guidance and going for a 1/4 inch gap all round to the bare wood tub frame. This picture shows the rough fit where the hinges are (yes, I know its a bit high, but its only lightly tacked into place, so I'm not bothered about that at the moment). My point is that all of the pictures that I have seen have the hinges recessed into the door pillar. If I do that with mine, then the gap is, in effect, zero rather than 1/4 inch. To make it look right (i.e. recessed into the door pillar) I was thinking of simply packing under the hinges in the door frame and letting them into the pillar by the same amount. This would move the hinges rearward but without altering the fit. Is this the right way to proceed?
![Image](http://locostbuilders.co.uk/upload/trial%20door%20fit.jpg)