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Sofa repair?

maduro89

Straight Razors and Whisky
Joined
Oct 9, 2011
Messages
302
So I have a pretty nice couch that i need to get repaired. One of the wooden beams broke and I was wondering if any of you woodworkers might know how to repair it. I can get pictures in when I get home this afternoon. Any feedback would be appreciated! ;D
 
Alright guys lol.. I have had my couch like this about an entire semester! Now that summer has started i actually have time to repair it. Here are some pictures I just took.
I managed to take the broken piece out and removed the springs, I then places it back and now I have a few questions. Should I sister this section of the wooden brace?
If yall have any more suggestions please let me know!
photo216.jpg

photo118.jpg

photo410.jpg
 
I would put some sort of bracing where the beak was. Maybe some metal straps or something.
 
Just sandwich another piece of wood on it and screw them together. Then re attach the springs to the wood.
 
Well, since you said "semester" . . . I'm going to assume you're a broke-ass college student. ;)

That couch, obviously, isn't exactly a pinnacle of the furniture maker's craft. Just glue, clamp, and screw some additional support to it (and the rest of the sections while you're at it) using something besides freakin' plywood. You can get hardwood 1 X 2 stock at any home center. Some little 'L' brackets where the sister piece abuts the front-to-back supports will make it fairly bulletproof, fat ass notwithstanding. :laugh:

The springs just reattach. It's a little tricky from that angle, because they're stapled down to the frame from the other side, before the batting goes in. I'd suggest attaching them to the sister piece instead.

~Boar

Oh, and you can make the whole thing a helluva lot sturdier if you tie the springs off better while you've got it open:

8wayhandtied.jpg


Different kind of springs, but you get the idea.

~Boar
 
Well, since you said "semester" . . . I'm going to assume you're a broke-ass college student. ;)

That couch, obviously, isn't exactly a pinnacle of the furniture maker's craft. Just glue, clamp, and screw some additional support to it (and the rest of the sections while you're at it) using something besides freakin' plywood. You can get hardwood 1 X 2 stock at any home center. Some little 'L' brackets where the sister piece abuts the front-to-back supports will make it fairly bulletproof, fat ass notwithstanding. :laugh:

The springs just reattach. It's a little tricky from that angle, because they're stapled down to the frame from the other side, before the batting goes in. I'd suggest attaching them to the sister piece instead.

~Boar

Oh, and you can make the whole thing a helluva lot sturdier if you tie the springs off better while you've got it open:

8wayhandtied.jpg


Different kind of springs, but you get the idea.

~Boar
Thanks brother!! Just finished putting her back together, I havent sat on that side of the couch in months!!
 
There is some TV infomercial I saw with these slats which interlocked and supported "1,000 pounds of Sumo!" sounds like your a prime candidate for that. If not, this sounds like a perfect opportunity for motivated and inebriated college kids to jury rig some fix. Either way, make us post college kids proud.
 
There is some TV infomercial I saw with these slats which interlocked and supported "1,000 pounds of Sumo!" sounds like your a prime candidate for that. If not, this sounds like a perfect opportunity for motivated and inebriated college kids to jury rig some fix. Either way, make us post college kids proud.
LOL. yea fixed it! ;D
 
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