Friend of mine has a kitchen table that belonged to her mom and dad originally. Now it's in her kitchen. And one of the problemas with it is that the leaves have started to develop these cracks on the end. I don't know how old this thing is but it is interesting too to look at how it was originally joined. They did a little tongue and groove joint there when they put them together, which is cool. This is actually a kind of thing that comes across to us here at GOA as a question pretty often which is how do I deal with this kind of stuff. If all I do is put glue in that crack and clamp the heck out of this, I could probably get enough clamp pressure on that to pull it closed, but it's not gonna stay. We've got something, causes to open. Kind of looks to me like this maybe sat in water a little bit. And when it did that caused this end to deformed like that and split. So what we really need to do is repair the crack not just force it again into a closed position. That being said I wanna maintain this original as much as possible. I don't wanna do any refinishing here. Cause then this will end up as a different color than the table. So here's what we're gonna do. Bandsaw jointer, biscuit jointer, clamps. I'm here at the bandsaw. Cause what we're gonna do is rip right through that spot. And I'm on the bandsaw cause it's got such a narrow curve. The curve on this bandsaw blade is about 32/1000 of an inch. On most table saw blades you're maybe, if it's 1/8 of an inch, that's 125/1000. So I'm gonna lose a lot less material here. And as a result, when I put this back together it'll be less obvious. Then jointer in order to clean those edges up and get everything put back together. But we'll get there in a second. I've got the fence so that when I do this rip I'm gonna start right on that crack. Next off to the jointer to clean those edges up. We gotta do just a little bit of work here at the jointer. Honestly, the seam between these two boards isn't horrible right off the bandsaw, but it's not great. So just the jointers gonna do what jointers do which is clean up that edge and make the glue joint way more better. So the question now is just, is that enough, man. I'm pretty thrilled with it. Cause when I close it, that's where the crack was. But boy, that closes seamlessly all the way down. From here, workbench, we'll get this baby glued up. Back at the jointer, very, very light pass. And it's better to do a number of light passes to see what just how much you have to take off then take off a heavy pass and have more than you need. So the bottom line is we're trying to remove as little material as possible in order to get these to go back together so that we don't change the overall dimension much. And we don't change the overall look much. Now I have cut a couple of domino slots and these boards and they don't need it for strength. The only reason they need it is for registration. You could do dominoes, you could do dowels. You could do biscuits, but that's gonna help me across the center here. Make sure that those top faces stay in line because when this comes together, there will be no opportunity to sand the surface after the fact. The tape is on there because that's how I put my marks on there for the slots I was gonna cut, my layout. So that I wouldn't have to put marks on the wood surface. I'm gonna start in the middle have good one illicitly there, pull closed. Pull closed. And then on the ends here if you wanna buy a little alignment you can bridge the seam with another clamp. That's good. Pull closed. Now that everything is closed I'm gonna take the clamps off. And you probably know I'm not a big fan of wiping glue with a wet rag, except in these cases because we've got a finished surface here. So I wanna get that glue residue off of there now. So I don't have to come back and try to scrape glue later. Which would then mess up the finished surface. All right, wat do you think? That's pretty darn seamless I'd say. I like it. I've actually got two more of these leaves to do. The same process too, but this is a great way that again, the concept here is we're not just forcing the crack back together with glue in it. We're actually repairing the problem. We're cutting the stress out, jointing the edge. Just like you would a fresh project putting her back together. And that gives us a really good look here and a good repair that hopefully is gonna last. As long as this heirloom table already has, problem fixed.
I saw that the other end of the leaf had a crack in it, too. It didn't line up with the one you expertly fixed. I suppose that the crack has to be fairly parallel to the edges in order to do this. How often does that happen?
Noted you ripped board freehand without fence. Do you feel the boards usually stay square after jointing due to such thin kerf?
I really like the final look!
A lot of table leaves have an edge board, 2 or 3 inches deep on the back of the leaf. I presume you just cut right thru them also?