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Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Man Steve,
when I saw the first 2 pics, I was shocked. This great and new table that seriously impacted! Seeing the further pics, my smile came back. You fixed it great. As mentioned already, now the table has a history.
Klaus
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Location: NJ
Yup, username checks out.
(I also have way too many books, and since we're moving now, I realize how heavy they are. Still, it's one more bit of old technology - like planes, handsaws - that I just don't want to give up.)
Great repair. I'm sure you won't notice it in a week's time.
Posts: 10,717
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Location: Orlando, Florida
Outstanding tutorial on your fix, Steve! I took, am glad no one was hurt. The nice thing about solid wood is its ability to be repaired. That repair would have been a lot more difficult, if not impossible were it veneered plywood.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
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Location: South Alabama
Thanks for the kind words--and the sympathy!
I did repair and reinforce the valance. At it turns out, the brackets holding the valances on were attached with wood screws that were not appropriate for the application. I'm a little surprised that this didn't happen years ago. A few books are going back up on one of the three valances in the room, but it's the one above the workbench (where a collapse wouldn't be catastrophic), but no more books are going on this one.
Steve S.
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Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot
Tutorials and Build-Alongs at
The Literary Workshop
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Nice job! When my dad and I built a new top for our cherry dining room table (a Shaker-style trestle table), we screwed up and cracked the top in one place. But we glued it up and I'm pretty sure I'm the only one who notices--or even knows of--the flaw. My only suggestion is to replace the pine with a piece of cherry. I suspect it wouldn't need to be as thick as the pine you used. In any case it would look better. Probably no one would even notice it's there.
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Would bread-board ends have prevented the split?
WoodTinker
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As they say, "Life is messy - clean it up!". Or in woodworking terms - "Things break - fix 'em!". That was quite the save, which is of course the true measure of a woodworkers ability.
True power makes no noise - Albert Schweitzer. It's obvious he was referring to hand tools