What happened?

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Bristol_Rob

Established Member
Joined
18 Jul 2018
Messages
478
Reaction score
288
Location
Bristol
I was gluing up this little teak table and the top split.

I was clamping it and understand that I was applying pressure in a particular way. But when I look at the internal grain of the split, it looks odd.
Kind of like it's overly dry, and like it was suffering from some kind of rot or decay.

Has anyone seen something like this before?

The last photo is my attempt at repair 🤞
 

Attachments

  • IMG-20240611-WA0003.jpeg
    IMG-20240611-WA0003.jpeg
    762.4 KB
  • 20240612_184248.jpg
    20240612_184248.jpg
    1.1 MB
  • 20240612_184255.jpg
    20240612_184255.jpg
    795 KB
  • 20240612_184259.jpg
    20240612_184259.jpg
    806.2 KB
  • 20240612_184303.jpg
    20240612_184303.jpg
    780.7 KB
  • 20240612_184306.jpg
    20240612_184306.jpg
    779.5 KB
  • 20240612_184314.jpg
    20240612_184314.jpg
    759.8 KB
  • 20240612_184322.jpg
    20240612_184322.jpg
    753.6 KB
  • 20240612_184327.jpg
    20240612_184327.jpg
    729.2 KB
  • 20240612_185225.jpg
    20240612_185225.jpg
    1 MB
Looks like it may have had a pre existing shake in it unless thats the split. The holy bit could be a tunnel from a wood boring insect, i have seen similar. Also although Teak is regarded a highly durable it can & does rot if it is damp or in contact with the ground for long periods. Often in such cases the rot will be extremely patchy & localised.
 
I agree with your thoughts, it feels like there was a pre-existing flaw.
Notwithstanding that - it did glue back up nicely :)
 
Back
Top