Are you tired of that chair that won't stay still? You can easily fix this 
annoying problem overnight, with only a few materials, and relax steadily in
the morning.

Materials Needed:
* Sandpaper or steel wool
* Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue
* Wood clamp or tourniquet
* Vinegar (if needed)
list end

Step 1: Remove all old glue from both parts to be re-glued with sandpaper or 
steel wool.
* Tip: Use vinegar to soften some old glues that may be difficult to remove.

Step 2: Using Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue spread glue on both surfaces. You 
don't need a lot.

Use a wood clamp, or tourniquet to apply pressure on joint for 30 minutes. For 
firmest bond allow to dry overnight.Tightening loose chairs is one furniture 
repair most homeowners avoid. Everyone assumes you need dozens of clamps, a 
special glue and knowledge akin to
black magic to repair a chair - not so. Your total expenditure for repairing 
every loose chair in your home should be less than $50.00, even if you have
to buy everything I list.

For now, we'll assume the chair is loose, but nothing is broken. Replacing 
broken parts is a whole other ball game.

The first consideration is the type of chair. If you have a typical dinette set 
(informal), the chairs have legs that are not perpendicular to the floor
and all the joints are glue joints. The legs are glued directly into the bottom 
of the seat with no screws. Dining room chairs (formal) typically have
legs parallel to each other (or nearly so), perpendicular to the floor. The 
cushioned seat is attached with screws, and the corners of the frame immediately
below the seat are held together with a block in each corner that is screwed 
and/or glued in place. Most chairs will fit into one or the other of these
two categories, or perhaps combine features of both.

Tools for Deconstruction:
* A rubber mallet (wrapping an old sock around a regular hammer will NOT work). 
This will run less than $10.00. 16 to 24 ounces is heavy enough.
* A roll of 1" masking tape
* Pencil
* Screwdriver
* Sharp pocket knife

First put a piece of masking tape on each part of the chair to mark its 
position. I use a simple abbreviation code: RF=right front, LF=left front, etc.
Mark each piece, all four legs, the stretchers that run between the legs front 
to back on each side, and, if there are any, the stretcher(s) running left
to right. Mark the stretchers so you can tell which end goes in front, back, 
left or right. These pieces may look symmetrical but chances are they aren't.
They must go back in the same position they were in originally. With a formal 
chair, also mark the rails, those board-like pieces immediately beneath the
seat cushion.

With a formal chair, remove the upholstered seat and the screws holding the 
wooden corner blocks in place. Number the blocks and the inside of the rail
so you can put the blocks back where they came from.

Now see what you can pull apart just by wiggling and pulling on the pieces. 
After you've removed what you can, go after the stretchers, if they haven't
already come out. Use the mallet to hit the leg, swinging parallel to the 
stretcher. Hit as close to the joint as possible, holding the stretcher tightly.
Continue this process until the stretchers are removed.

Having removed the stretchers, the legs should be looser than they were, if not 
falling out. Use the same process to separate the legs from the rails (on
a formal chair) or, on an informal chair turn the piece upside down, striking 
the seat bottom with the mallet while holding the leg to be removed. Always
try to hit as close to the joint as possible, swinging in line with the piece 
you're trying to remove. You want to pull it out, not break it off. Do this
over a padded surface. If the piece separates suddenly, remember you're holding 
only part of it; the rest will fall. One last note: some joints will be
just as tight as the day they were originally glued. The old adage, "If it 
ain't broke, don't fix it" applies. If you can't get a joint apart without 
extreme
exertion, leave it alone.

Got the chairs apart, did we? No mashed fingers or broken parts? Good! Now 
let's make them like new again.

Tools for Reassembly
* Pocket knife with a small blade 8 ounce bottle of Elmer's Carpenters Wood glue
* The shortest coil available of sash cord (ask for it by name). This looks 
like clothes line, but it isn't. Sash cord is the woven cotton rope that was
used to hold sash weights in old fashioned windows. If you have a choice, get 
the larger diameter.
* 3 feet of 5/8" or 3/4" dowel rod, cut into 1 foot lengths
* An old cotton T shirt cut up into small rags
* A section of newspaper
* Some Q-tips
* A small pan of water

Hold the knife at a right angle to the dowel/tenon and scrape the old glue off. 
Don't cut - scrape. Get it off all the dowels and the tenon ends of the
stretchers. Using the small blade, scrape the glue out of the holes that held 
the dowels and tenons. Again, scrape. You don't want to cut the wood down,
just remove the old glue. If the joints are not cleaned properly, the new glue 
will not adhere.

Using your masking tape markers as guides, put the chair back together. No 
glue, yet. This is a dry fit, to make certain you've thoroughly cleaned the 
holes
and not left any burrs elsewhere that will hinder the assembly when you do glue 
it. Correct anything that doesn't fit.

Whether you're working with formal chairs (cushion seat) or dinette chairs 
(legs attach directly to the seat) here's the assembly process. Fold the 
newspaper
to get a square 4 or more layers thick. Put a puddle of glue on it about the 
size of a silver dollar (ask your grandfather).

For dinette chairs: using a Q-tip, spread the glue (you want to get a film of 
glue - if the glue runs, you've got too much) over the tenons of the stretcher
and into the holes the tenons go into. If there is a left to right stretcher, 
fit it into the two side stretchers first, then insert them into the legs.
Spread the glue over the leg tenons and their matching holes in the seat, and 
insert them. On a chair that was just slightly loose before, you may have
to use the mallet to drive them in. You should give them a good tap, anyway, 
just to make certain you drive them home. Set the chair upright on a flat
surface. Take a length of sash cord long enough to go around the chair at the 
feet, and tie a knot in it. The cord should be slightly loose. Insert a section
of dowel rod between the cord and the chair, and turn it clockwise to form a 
tourniquet. Keep turning it to tighten the cord and drive the tenons completely
into place. Angle the dowel so it catches on the chair seat (or a stretcher) 
and can't unwind. Dip a rag in the water and wipe off the squeezed out glue.
Dry the joints with another rag. Set it aside overnight on a flat surface (this 
lets you be sure all four legs are touching the ground and you haven't
pulled the chair out of line).

For formal chairs, spread the glue as before to attach the front rail to the 
two front legs. Assemble stretchers as above, then put the side stretchers
into the front legs. Put the side rails into the front legs. Lay the chair on 
its back on the floor. Position the stretchers and side rails over the holes
and drive them into place with the mallet. Set the chair upright on a flat 
surface. Take two sections of sash cord, one around the rails, the other around
the legs at the stretchers. Wind up both with dowel rods uniformly to tighten 
the joints. Wipe off glue as before and leave to dry. Corner blocks can be
replaced after the frame has set up.

Be sure to put the chairs on a flat surface while tightening. This insures that 
all four feet meet the floor.

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