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Thread: Fixing Old Wooden Chairs
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30th November 2019, 09:34 PM #1
Fixing Old Wooden Chairs
I've somehow been tasked with fixing about a dozen wobbly old wooden chairs from the local Cranky Womens Association hall. The joints are all loose & some are missing one of the gussets between the seat & back uprights. It looks like they are just dowel joints, so I'll try to pull them all apart & redo them.
What I wnt to know is how can I easily make the replacement gussets, as the existing ones look like they're made with bent laminations. As I don't want to have to build a former & steamer to steam bend & glue laminations, would cutting them from boards, with the grain at 45* to the flat faces be strong enough?
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30th November 2019, 10:46 PM #2
Are you sure those gussets are original? They look like an after thought to me, probably put in place to compensate for wobbly joints. I can't imagine that they add that much strength to the joint.
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30th November 2019, 11:24 PM #3
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1st December 2019, 08:54 AM #4
...and no, cutting 'em with the grain at 45deg won't have the same strength. Too many short shear lines.
- Andy Mc
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1st December 2019, 10:34 AM #5
Thanks guys. They look to be original, all dozen or so chairs have them. As they look to be laminated, it wouldn't have been a quick fix, a lot of work has gone into making & shaping them to fit. Considering the amount of work required, I might suggest they just buy some new chairs.
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1st December 2019, 10:44 AM #6GOLD MEMBER
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You could also try using https://www.timbecon.com.au/chair-doctor-glue as a quick fix that may actually work.
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1st December 2019, 10:44 AM #7
You do see gussets like those used in chairs . Specially on Beech bentwood chairs . Every other part of a bentwood is steam bent and a couple of bent gussets for strength was the norm .
They do look like an added idea someone has come up with on that chair for sure.
You have a normal sawn wood constructed factory chair and all of a sudden there is two steam bent bits added which are in the way , different colour and no other part of the chair is made that way .
I had the same problem with a bentwood missing the same corner gusset .The fastest way I could come up with for a replacement was to go looking for a bent dry branch off a tree . If not a dry one then a wet one and let it dry after shaping . The customer wasn't wanting to pay me to make a one off by steam bending . Once I pointed out all the repair options and how long each would take for the whole chair the lady didn't want to go ahead with any . She gave up on it .
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1st December 2019, 02:25 PM #8
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