How to Repair Columns That Were Built in 1861.
by drewgrey in Workshop > Woodworking
20358 Views, 25 Favorites, 0 Comments
How to Repair Columns That Were Built in 1861.
Hi, My name is Drew and I work at the UW where some very old columns were sadly allowed to rot. I was the carpenter who did much of the repair and made or designed many of the tools to do the job.
Removal
To lift the columns that were rotten at the base I designed a metal frame that when "let" into the rotten base with a chainsaw actually fit under the columns.
Lifting the Column
The column was lifted using this heavy metal frame.
Wheels
In order to prep and paint the columns I came up with this idea . I could roll the column by myself .
Damage
I made a survey of each column to find out how much new wood I would have to mill.
Midevil Scraper
To assist the painters in paint removal and to help me shape new staves I had these made. It's nice to have access to a water cutter.
Scraper
Because the staves are tapered only the initial hogging out of the wood could be done with the shaper. The rest was done by hand.
Old School
Because the staves are tapered I was limited in how much I could use the shaper. So a lot of hand work ensued. I also made a pea-shooter to toe nail the staves together using hot dipped galvies.
Really Good Circles
One tricky aspect of this job was creating patterns for the shaper to run against a rub collar to make the concrete form. The form was made of several stacks of poplar rings that had to join exactly atop another with each profile matching the exact duplicated pattern of the original column base and meeting the ring above and below it.
I made the ring by joining 120 pieces of poplar . The length of each piece dictated the approximate size of the ring and the size of the pattern rings dictated the exact finished size of each ring.
The first picture is of the router jig I made to make perfect patterns. I used some channel steel ,MDF and a really nice round chunk of brass for the pivot.
I made the ring by joining 120 pieces of poplar . The length of each piece dictated the approximate size of the ring and the size of the pattern rings dictated the exact finished size of each ring.
The first picture is of the router jig I made to make perfect patterns. I used some channel steel ,MDF and a really nice round chunk of brass for the pivot.
Not Bad for a Concrete Form
Since the form would be used 4 times I had to protect it. To try and achieve a nice finish on the concrete I sanded and sanded.................
Meet the New Base, Same As the Old Base...but Harder
After the concrete was poured I had to attach the treated wood rings that I would toenail the columns to through an identical ring in each column.
Put It Back
To lower the rebuilt and repainted columns over the iron post in their center's I created this padded squeeze harness.
Laser Bob
I have no patience .I'm sorry I just don't so the idea of trying to use a plumb bob or a level to line up four landmarks while a crew of workers was watching? No way.
Instead I used a self plumbing laser strapped to the new concrete base at the apex of the point where a string touched all 4 bases and a target fasten to the sweet spot on the column. When the red dot was on the x it was plumb. This worked beautifully .
Instead I used a self plumbing laser strapped to the new concrete base at the apex of the point where a string touched all 4 bases and a target fasten to the sweet spot on the column. When the red dot was on the x it was plumb. This worked beautifully .
OK Next
All 4 columns back in place.