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Run the girders out to the frame edge of the door, and hang the legs from the girders, not the door. Easy peasy.Lee
If it's an L girder, both. Just make sure you're using reasonably good straight, knot-free 1x3 or 1x4.
Isn't this a bit of overkill?
Obviously I need to prevent sag, but I'm seriously not planning on standing on the things, or sitting on them, or... well, anything else. As the single door is right now, it's pretty rigid (the amount of movement because it's sitting on carpet is FAR worse than the movement of the actual structural members.I want to combat the sag, but I'd be curious to see how bad that actually is over time. I'm not planning on this thing living for the next 30 years, either.I think a simple brace down the spine might just do the job, but I also think some masonite fascia, screwed in, will provide the tension needed to prevent the sag.Or am I missing something?
As the single door is right now, it's pretty rigid (the amount of movement because it's sitting on carpet is FAR worse than the movement of the actual structural members.
Since you have piles of junk to hide, consider inexpensive bookcases from IKEA. Bolt the vertical members to the side of a bookcase at each end of the door and run the girders the length of the door. Fill the bookcases with the nice looking junk (books and such) for weight and pile the rest of the stuff behind the bookcase. A surprisingly solid structure is the result.
What did you use for fascia? I had some sagging on the JD even with 1/8" Masonite fascia. But I also didn't extend the fascia below the base of the door, so that might have been part of the problem.