I assume you mean a miter lock bit and not just a straight 45 degree miter bit?
I did not realize it was sold as sheets. This is good as I have to trim the garage door openings of my icf build and I thought I was going to have to glue pieces together as the walls are 12.25" thick. Is it stable enough width wise to survive?
Also are the cortex plugs/screw standard size heads?
Yes on the miter-lock bits
The attached photo is one of 18 pedestals (36" tall, 14" wide at the body, bigger across the beveled tops and base) that I built about 10 years ago for a client. No separation at the joints yet. Similar to installing wood board and batten, plan your fastener locations to avoid creating buckle zones, and to allow slight movement. If I was jambing and casing a door opening with PVC, I'd try to fasten the jambs down the center, one line of cortex screws, PVC glue and cortex screw the case to the jamb, and fasten the case in the center to the block. (I'd try to use a sheet of 5/4" for the jamb, if possible, to give better purchase for the case screws)
I'm pretty sure Cortex caps only come in one size, but you may be able to use the smallest head tapcons if you carefuly pre-drill. Check diameters before proceeding I have made my own oversize caps using cheap plug cuttters, but it was time consuming, and they needed to be cleaned up.
FWIW, I was installing Azek decking on a job and couldn't understand how my laborer was cutting everything short, repeatedly. I'd give him a batch of numbers to cut and he kept bringing me material that was short when I went to install. It took awhile, and a bunch of comparing tape measures, we finally realized that he was cutting off a pile that had been in direct summer sunlight, and bringing them to me in the shade. By the time 10-15 minutes had passed and I was placing them to install, they had shrunk roughly 1/8" over 16' lengths.
Moral of the story is to plan for a little movement.
Edit: Picture uploads are killing me!