roger
Well-Known Member
I learnt from a friend a useful repair method for antique wooden chairs. Bear with me; it might be useful for boat furniture.
Antique dining chairs can get wobbly when the mortice joints get loose. Taking the chair apart is dodgy and can easily brek parts. The alternative he suggested was to use a hypodermic syringe and inject water based glue through a small hole specially drilled int the joint.
A 1/16" hole is certainly big enough to take the hypodermic needle. Warming and slightly diluting the glue makes pumping it in pretty easy. The small hole is pretty inconspicuous and can be filled. Even so best drilled where it's not obvious.
For on board use you do need a low viscosity glue. Perhaps low viscosity epoxy, perhaps Cascamite or even PVA.
What particularly surprised me was that a useful glue could be pumped effectively through a needle with a bore of less than a millimetre.
Antique dining chairs can get wobbly when the mortice joints get loose. Taking the chair apart is dodgy and can easily brek parts. The alternative he suggested was to use a hypodermic syringe and inject water based glue through a small hole specially drilled int the joint.
A 1/16" hole is certainly big enough to take the hypodermic needle. Warming and slightly diluting the glue makes pumping it in pretty easy. The small hole is pretty inconspicuous and can be filled. Even so best drilled where it's not obvious.
For on board use you do need a low viscosity glue. Perhaps low viscosity epoxy, perhaps Cascamite or even PVA.
What particularly surprised me was that a useful glue could be pumped effectively through a needle with a bore of less than a millimetre.