05-20-2021, 08:51 AM
I had a couple glue lines split on the pedestal base of my dining table last night. Oak, 100+ years old, and I'm assuming put together with hide glue.
Basically too much weight was put on the table and the glue line failed on each side of one of the legs. However, it appears that the glue line break only occurred lower down on the pedestal, up towards the top it seems fine.
The broken part is towards the bottom of this picture, but it looks like I also have a split on the left too.
I've got two different repairs to consider. Temporary and permanent. For temp (because I'd like to use the table for a few days before doing the repair) I'm thinking something like a series of hose clamps around the base would hold that piece in place. I've got about an inch to work with between the base of the leg and the bottom of the pedestal, so should be enough room. Not positive I'll even try a temp method, but might make things easier.
For a more permanent repair my initial thought is to pop back in place, and inject some epoxy in those spots. Considering the age I imagine the base is glued with hide glue, but I don't think drizzling that in there is going to do much of anything, and heating and taking apart the whole base sounds like hell. I don't think I'd be able to get the base back together in any way that would look reasonable.
Any suggestions? Thoughts?
Basically too much weight was put on the table and the glue line failed on each side of one of the legs. However, it appears that the glue line break only occurred lower down on the pedestal, up towards the top it seems fine.
The broken part is towards the bottom of this picture, but it looks like I also have a split on the left too.
I've got two different repairs to consider. Temporary and permanent. For temp (because I'd like to use the table for a few days before doing the repair) I'm thinking something like a series of hose clamps around the base would hold that piece in place. I've got about an inch to work with between the base of the leg and the bottom of the pedestal, so should be enough room. Not positive I'll even try a temp method, but might make things easier.
For a more permanent repair my initial thought is to pop back in place, and inject some epoxy in those spots. Considering the age I imagine the base is glued with hide glue, but I don't think drizzling that in there is going to do much of anything, and heating and taking apart the whole base sounds like hell. I don't think I'd be able to get the base back together in any way that would look reasonable.
Any suggestions? Thoughts?