skeetstar
Established Member
Folks, I know this will be really basic for many of you, but I'd like some guidance/approval of my plan to repair some chairs.
They are bespoke made farmhouse kitchen chairs, Elm allegedly, though they don't show much grain. The joints are coming apart due to a teenager (!) swinging back on the rear two legs. Owner had done some repairs on a couple of the chairs with steels screws running front to back to draw the joints together. I plan to;
1. remove all screws from the repaired chairs.
2. gently ease the joints apart and clean off old glue residue
3. Glue joints with PVA
4 plug the screw holes with suitable dowel, probably have to drill them out to a bigger diameter to accept the dowel
5 cross dowel through the tenons from the inside, drilling the holes such that there is no evidence of cross dowelling on the outer faces. Ill only be able to do this on the lower rails/stretchers, and not the seat rails. The seat rail joints will need to be dowelled through the outside faces.
Would 12mm dowels be the right sort of size?
Does that sound the correct approach? Be grateful for any advice that might be forthcoming.
They are bespoke made farmhouse kitchen chairs, Elm allegedly, though they don't show much grain. The joints are coming apart due to a teenager (!) swinging back on the rear two legs. Owner had done some repairs on a couple of the chairs with steels screws running front to back to draw the joints together. I plan to;
1. remove all screws from the repaired chairs.
2. gently ease the joints apart and clean off old glue residue
3. Glue joints with PVA
4 plug the screw holes with suitable dowel, probably have to drill them out to a bigger diameter to accept the dowel
5 cross dowel through the tenons from the inside, drilling the holes such that there is no evidence of cross dowelling on the outer faces. Ill only be able to do this on the lower rails/stretchers, and not the seat rails. The seat rail joints will need to be dowelled through the outside faces.
Would 12mm dowels be the right sort of size?
Does that sound the correct approach? Be grateful for any advice that might be forthcoming.
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