Most cane chairs are made from four pieces of some type of hard wood, so one 
way to repair holes is to replace the section with the bad holes.  And then 
redril the holes in the new piece of wood.  Era Trice    
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Fowle 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 8:27 AM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] caning repairing holes


  Assuming these are holes going through the rails of the chair from top to
  bottom, and the cane
  is fed through them as it makes a vertical 180 degree bend, I'd think you'd
  have to use a tiny saw to enlarge the broken out area of the hole and get a
  clean edge.
  I'd want to make the cuts so as to create a V shaped slot with the small end
  of the v towards the inside of the chair. Then you'd find wood that is a
  match for hardness and grain, and cut 
  little V shaped blocks that would fit in the holes. You could make them a
  bit large on the wide end of the v that will end up inside the hole.
  Then arrange to hold them in the V shaped slots maybe using some of those
  pegs we've been talking about while the glue dries.

  then you could gently reshape the holes with a round file.
  I think, if my image is correct, the new blocks would be covered by the
  cane, so color matching might not be important, but it might be an idea to
  put some kind of wood sealer on the new wood to reduce expansion due to
  absorbtion of moisture.

  I'd also assume you'd have to charge more to fix broken holes than your
  $1.25, since doing the little blocks and making the slots to fit would take
  some time.

  Just some more speculative off the hat thinking from ignorance.

  When i was at the Cal school for the blind, they were opposed to all those
  stereotyped occupations for us, thus they taught us almost nothing of any
  use at all!

  tom Fowle


   

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