Victorthesecond
Established Member
Good morning all, and Happy New Year! I wonder if you might have some good advice for an enthusiastic amateur? Over the holidays, we managed to break one of our dining chairs. (It could have been a lot worse, happily the occupant at the time went down very gracefully!). I've attached a few pictures of the damage but basically, you'll see that the entire back (consists of the back legs and rear upright) has snapped at both joints where the seat is attached. The chairs are, to be fair, quite old, But, they are G-Plan, so were a decent buy when we got them. It looks to me that, when they were made, the back was attached to the seat by simply inserting wood into a slot on both side pieces (of the back) and glueing it into 2 other slots on the seat. That in addition to the long slots that run along the seat and also attach to the back. So, I'm thinking I can just chisel out the broken wood to re-create the slots, insert a new piece of wood into each of the 4 slots (ie 2 on the chair seat and one on each leg) and rejoin the whole thing with lots of Gorilla Wood Glue.
Would you agree? If so, is there any tool you might suggest rather than a simple chisel? Maybe a hole saw (I've no idea if that's the right suggestion!) Or, should I simply drill out as much of the old wood as I can and chisel out the rest?
Any other ideas welcome as well.
And, thank you all in advance!
Mike
Would you agree? If so, is there any tool you might suggest rather than a simple chisel? Maybe a hole saw (I've no idea if that's the right suggestion!) Or, should I simply drill out as much of the old wood as I can and chisel out the rest?
Any other ideas welcome as well.
And, thank you all in advance!
Mike