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| Forum topic by phonewired | posted 313 days ago | 1672 views | 0 times favorited | 19 replies | ![]() |
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313 days ago |
I have a small antique drop leaf table that I am repairing. The top has a 1 foot hairline split in it. I would like to know if wood glue and clamping it will be enough to satbalize it. The screw holes for most of the hinges are completly stripped out. Is there a drillable resin that I can use to fill these? This looks to be poplar wood. Also looking for a sandable, moldable filller for very large chips dings. Thank you so much, Noel. -- Noel, Iowa www.primitivefurnituresales.com |
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313 days ago |
One method I have used for filling stripped screw holes is simply to use some dowel material, golf tees, wooden matches, etc. to create a wood plug, add glue and insert them into the hole to be filled until it is filled. When the glue dries the plug can be leveled and is ready for drilling. As far as the crack goes I don’t know if glue and clamping will do the job. What I have done, on cabinet tops for example, is to remove the top, remove the crack on my table saw, joint the edges and re-glue. You only loose 1/8” of material off the top so it really does not affect the width appreciably. -- With God's help all things are possible- even woodworking. Woodworking is not just a hobby, it is an (expletive deleted) expensive hobby. |
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313 days ago |
Ditto on Scott’s tip for the screw holes. Combinations of round and flat toothpicks also work well to fill up the hole. -- Use the fence Luke |
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313 days ago |
Thank you. I will do that on the screw holes today. The problem with the split on the top is it’s not in a staight line. The top middle board is just one piece and the split is at an angle. It goes back from the edge about 1 foot. Thanks, Again for the tips. -- Noel, Iowa www.primitivefurnituresales.com |
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313 days ago |
Glue and clamping will be enough to hold the crack if it matches up with no gaps. Glue has been proven to be very strong. -- Berta in NC |
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313 days ago |
the best filler is no filler at all. Cant stand the stuff but at times is just one of those neccassary evils. I mix universal fine grind tints to the colour I need and add that to a white based two part epoxy auto body filler. You can also tint glue for crack repairs |
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313 days ago |
Roman, -- Gene |
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313 days ago |
most bondo is about the same color its about what color hardner you get with it , red , blue white . |
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313 days ago |
OMG! Bondo on wood??? Don’t do it!!! Scott is right. You need to cut the crack out. However if you can’t because it is not allong a seam, you have another option, filler sticks. There are two types available, wax and resin based. They are offered in many colors and will fill the crack completely. Follow the directions, melt the resin into the crack, level it and polish it. But for heavens sake keep the bondo in the garage… Tom -- Anybody can become a woodworker, but only a Craftsman can hide his mistakes. |
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313 days ago |
The best wood filler I have ever used is Timbermate from Australia. I think Woodcraft or Rockler sell it. Regards Jerry -- jerry,mlchigan |
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313 days ago |
I’ll second that Jerry. Timbermate is the best. -- Anybody can become a woodworker, but only a Craftsman can hide his mistakes. |
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313 days ago |
bondo is very common to use on wood . its better than any wood filler ive ever used . although only for paint grade not stain . and not for structual repair only cosmetic . ive used it for more than 20 yr. |
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313 days ago |
Minwax makes a putty that comes in a small jar that is pretty much the consistency of clay. You force it into the crack, then scrape/wipe off the excess. I’ve had good success with it. -- Charlie M. "Woodworking - patience = firewood" |
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313 days ago |
I too have used Bondo to decent effect under paint on a seriously abused door post (torn out section due to wind-blown screen door). Hide glue and sawdust of the same wood species, sanded in and heat cured with an old ROS disk works well, and disappears pretty nicely under a clear coat finish. It will also take stain. For screw holes, there is The Plugger from Lee Valley,
and it can be used for round inlays and for grafting when attaching a scion to desirable rootstock in horticulture. After opposable thumbs, the next great evolutionary leap forward was tool utilization. -- "Bordnerizing" perfectly good lumber for over a decade. |
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313 days ago |
I’ve used Bondo and furniture that’s to be painted. A sawmill owner gave me some White Pine 2” thick to make a bed for his daughter and the were worm holes all through it. 3/8” worm holes. Biggest holes I ever saw. I’ve got a couple of the tools that Scott showed. One for a drill and one with a hollow handle. The handle is filled with the plugs. They look like an ice cream cone, only miniture. I got mine at Harbor Freight probably cheaper than Lee Valley. -- What happens in the workshop stays in the workshop. No wait that doesn't sound right. Karson Southern Delaware karson_morrison@bigfoot.com † |
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313 days ago |
I like timbermate, have used it for years, on turnings and on other works the colors they have can be mixed and matched to come close to any tree species. It won’t freeze, any excess you put back in the jar. If it dries out you can add water and reconstitute it. good stuff, smells like cow sh*t. -- Mike. mwurm13@yahoo.com |
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313 days ago |
Bondo is actually a fantastic filler for painted work and MDF. I even used thin skim coats on model aircraft. Thin coats weren’t too heavy and held up very well to vibration. Auto body “spot putty”, as sold in toothpaste-style tubes, also is useful. On the antique table, I’d rip out the crack and reglue, as is mentioned earlier. Also mentioned earlier, toothpicks, wood shavings, etc… mixed with wood glue can tighten loose screws quite effectively. -- - Please help keep Lumberjocks an enjoyable escape by refusing to participate in political discussions. Simply spit out the bait and ignore the thread... |
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312 days ago |
If it was me, I’d use a flat-bottom drill bit to bore out the stripped holes, then plug them with a dowel and start fresh with the screw holes. Nothing novel there. Be sure to wrap some tape or something around the bit as a depth gauge lest you go through the wood! I sounds to me like the crack is more-or-less a hairline crack in the niddle of the panel. Does it go straight through, or surface only? I had a mitre joint that had a barely-visible gap, too small to even try any type of putty. Since I was using polyurethane finish anyway, I just brushed that in. Several coats later, it was full. Then I resumed finish sanding and applied the whole finish. I don’t think I could find that corner now. Could you do the same? Just build up the finish? For filler, you might try stripping the old finish them steaming the dents first. I was amazed at how well it actually works. I used an old giant sheet-metal soldering iron and a wet paper towel. Laid towel, pressed with iron until sizzling stops and towel starts to brown, then shift towel and repeat. It lifted about a 1/8” dent. No filler needed! Gouges, well, you’re on your own. I have no experience there. |
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312 days ago |
Thank you to everyone. All great tips again. Have a great day!!! -- Noel, Iowa www.primitivefurnituresales.com |
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309 days ago |
Dadgum Again I must have been learnt wrong. I been using bondo for years depending on the situation. i use artist colors to get what ever color i want. Catch it just right and you can block plane and scrape it flush and smooth. Minwax wood filler is nothing more than bondo. i have white ,yellow and gray and different color hardeners -- If you have a garden, a shop and a library, you have everything you need with apologies to Marcus Tullius Cicero |
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