01-02-2021, 08:10 PM
A friend of mine purchased one of those sit-up recliners from Amazon because of problems with his knees (recommended by his doctor). The delivery person dropped the package as they were carrying it to the door. They opened the box and everything looked okay so they accepted delivery, a couple days later the back gave way. They contacted Amazon and were told to repackage it and take it to their return center. Now, to get it out of the box they had to rip the box apart, a new box from UPS was $50, and there is no way someone with bad knees is going to load it into their car, even if it would fit (which it wouldn't). They finally convinced Amazon to declare the chair a loss and ship a new one. This time the delivery person (UPS this time around) rolled the box end-over-end to the door, the UPS person refused to wait while they called UPS to complain about the delivery, and wouldn't take the package back. They are hoping this chair will work.
Now, they asked me to look at the old chair to see if it could be repaired. I took a look, here is what I saw:
The support member for the frame is stacked pieces of wood (1/8", 3mm). Not plywood, just stacked lumber. I looked closely at each piece, there is no adhesive and the pieces all run in the same direction.
Behind the stack are two pieces, a cross member running to the support on the other side, and a triangular piece that is just attached to the cross member.
At the top is another cross member on the left, and a piece on the right that attached to another stack of boards which run down the height of the chair.
My thought is to cut the stack about 3" down from the cross members, sandwhich them between two solid pieces of lumber. Attach the lumber to the cross members with mending plates.
Think this will work?
Any other thoughts?
Now, they asked me to look at the old chair to see if it could be repaired. I took a look, here is what I saw:
The support member for the frame is stacked pieces of wood (1/8", 3mm). Not plywood, just stacked lumber. I looked closely at each piece, there is no adhesive and the pieces all run in the same direction.
Behind the stack are two pieces, a cross member running to the support on the other side, and a triangular piece that is just attached to the cross member.
At the top is another cross member on the left, and a piece on the right that attached to another stack of boards which run down the height of the chair.
My thought is to cut the stack about 3" down from the cross members, sandwhich them between two solid pieces of lumber. Attach the lumber to the cross members with mending plates.
Think this will work?
Any other thoughts?
Mike
I work on the 50-50-90 rule: If there's a 50-50 choice, I'll pick the wrong one 90% of the time!
I work on the 50-50-90 rule: If there's a 50-50 choice, I'll pick the wrong one 90% of the time!