Took on another wood project this weekend, a simple chair repair for a friend who is now completely paralyzed. We visited them last week; his wife mentioned that they had a rosewood dining set they bought when he was stationed on Guam; she wanted to sell it, but one of the armchairs was broken. I took it home with me, thinking it was going to be a simple glue repair.
First step was disassembly and removing the old glue. Looks like someone used Gorilla Glue sometime in the past. It foamed into the voids.

I was able to remove most of it with a razor knife, a sharp chisel and a sanding block. This is a 3x21 sanding belt that fits snugly around a piece of 3/4” plywood. Stays nice and flat.

Turned out that the obvious split was just the tip of the iceberg.

Needed to repair/ re-glue 7 different places to get this back together. Luckily the tenons and dowels were still intact. After carefully masking all the glue joints to deal with the inevitable squeeze out, it was time to put it back together.

I decided to use slow-set epoxy on the Rosewood, so I wiped all the joints with denatured alcohol, then mixed up a batch of glue.

Used a flux brush and a sharpened popsicle stick to get the glue where I wanted it to go.

Re-assembly was straightforward, but clamping it was a bit of a challenge, except for one place on the back of the seat there were no flat surfaces for my bar clamps to grab. It took quite a few clamps, ended up using spring clamps to support the bar clamps in some precarious positions.


Didn’t use all my clamps but I did open up a lot of space on the clamp wall when I got going; I was grabbing them right and left trying to maintain pressure on the glue joints. Really glad I opted for the slow-set epoxy. It went back together really well, I was able to close up the gaps from the split and the old glue jounts.

Wiped all the excess epoxy with a damp acetone rag, then walked away from it for 24 hours.

I’m sitting here typing on my phone, itching to get out there to strip the clamps and the tape but I want to let it sit for a while longer. It apparently had been broken for many years; a few more hours isn’t going to hurt.