Grain direction matters: fixing a loom handle
Patch glued into the mortice of a hand-made handle |
The first time I was in a rush, getting the loom ready for Christmas, and I was fixing an error I made housing the threads (in the form of a T nut) all the way at the top of a handle that doesn't have a hole all the way through. I had to drill out the metal as well as the wood, and didn't know the first thing about wood strength and grain direction. I was making it up as I went along.
The second time, I might have known better if I thought for a moment, but I stuck with what I did before since I knew it could be done. And again, after some use and a really good tightening, the threaded insert broke the short grain and stripped out the inside of the dowel. This time, though, I was reading an excellent book on the basics of woodworking, called The Foundations of Better Woodworking, and had just finished reading the section on The Wood.
A good read filled with valuable information |
So this time I chiseled off the entire base of the handle, and cut a mortice that removed the area where the dowel had been. I then dug out a piece of walnut to roughly match the handle material, found a section of quarter sawn grain, and patched it into the handle as shown above.
Then I drew a hexagon of the right size and pasted it to another quarter sawn section of the walnut using spray adhesive. This I took to the nifty little band saw my parents gave me for Christmas a few years back and cut the new section of handle.
Hexagon glued on as a pattern |
Using two clamps as a vice to allow clamping off the end of the bench |
Finished handle repair |
龙王殿小说posted by rookster at 12:36 AM 0 Comments