How to Repair a Broken Leg on Furniture

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Furniture legs take all the abuse. Not only do they hold the weight, but dragging furniture across rough floors can put quite a strain on them as well. Add to that fact that the leg frequently is one of the thinnest and least supported pieces of your furniture, and you have a recipe for broken furniture legs. Many legs can be repaired as long as all pieces of the leg are present.

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Things You'll Need

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How to Repair a Broken Furniture Leg

Step 1: Position the Furniture

Turn the furniture over to relieve the weight from the broken leg. Set it on a pair of saw horses or another flat, sturdy work surface. Turn wood tables on their top and other furniture onto its back or side to make the leg easily accessible.

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Step 2: Determine the Extent of the Damage

Assess the damage. Examine threads or bolts attaching the leg to the furniture, these frequently strip out of the body of the furniture. Collect all of the pieces of a splintered leg and reassemble to be sure that the pieces can be fit back together.

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Step 3: Insert a Matchstick

Place a matchstick into a hole in wood that has been wallowed out, or stripped, so that the hole is loose and the leg will not tighten into the base of the furniture. Break the matchstick off even with the top of the hole. Place the leg into position and twist the leg clockwise to tighten the leg into place. The matchstick provides additional friction and pressure to hold the screw in place. More than one matchstick may be needed for some holes. Use the same technique to tighten screws in corner leg braces that are stripped, causing legs to fail.

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Step 4: Glue Splintered Wood

Apply glue to the inside surfaces of a splintered leg. Use a PVA or hide-type wood glue, which creates a bond stronger than the original wood fibers. Carefully set the pieces together snugly and clamp them together using spring or C clamps, being careful not to damage the finish with the clamps. You can also wrap the leg with masking tape to hold it in place. Allow 24 hours for the glue to harden before removing the clamps or tape.

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Step 5: Create a Hole in the Leg

Bore into furniture legs that are broken off cleanly to rejoin them with a dowel rod. Mark the center of the leg on both pieces. Drill a ¼-inch hole into each piece 1 inch deep. Cut a ¼-inch dowel 1 ¾ inches long. Apply wood glue to the holes in both pieces of the broken legs and to the surrounding broken surface.

Step 6: Insert the Dowel

Set the dowel into the hole in the piece of leg still attached to the furniture. Set the broken piece of leg, centered on the dowel, onto the leg and line up the broken ends. Clamp the leg in place with a bar clamp and allow 24 hours for the glue to harden.

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