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Inject glue into joints without disassembly using a syringe
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Use a glue syringe or squeeze bottle with a needle tip to inject wood glue or thin epoxy directly into a loose joint through a small drilled hole, without having to take the piece apart. This is the practical approach when a chair or table has joints that are too difficult or risky to disassemble.
How It Works
A syringe with a blunt-tipped needle or a glue bottle with a fine applicator tip can force adhesive deep into the gap of a loose joint. By drilling a small (1/16-inch) access hole into the joint from an inconspicuous location, you create an injection point. The glue flows into the gap between the tenon and mortise, re-bonding the joint.
Step-by-Step
- Work the joint back and forth to determine the extent of looseness
- Choose an inconspicuous spot on the joint and drill a 1/16-inch hole into the joint cavity
- Fill a glue syringe with thinned wood glue (mix roughly 10% water to thin slightly) or use a low-viscosity epoxy
- Insert the syringe tip into the hole and inject glue slowly
- Rock the joint back and forth while injecting to help glue penetrate all surfaces
- Continue injecting until glue seeps out of the joint lines
- Clamp the joint tightly
- Wipe excess glue immediately
- Plug the injection hole with a toothpick dipped in glue, trim flush after drying
- Allow 24 hours to cure
Tips
- Veterinary syringes (available at farm supply stores) work well and are inexpensive
- Chair Doctor brand makes a kit specifically for this purpose with thin glue and applicator
- For very loose joints, thin CA (super glue) can wick deep into the gap, but it is less forgiving than PVA
- This technique is popular for repairing Windsor chairs and other chairs with round tenons that are nearly impossible to disassemble
- Work from the bottom or back of the joint where the access hole will not be visible
Common Mistakes
- Not injecting enough glue: you want the cavity saturated, not just damp
- Skipping the clamping step: the glue needs pressure to create a good bond
- Using glue that is too thick to flow through the syringe and into the gap
📅 Created: 2/21/2026, 2:49:11 PM 📌 diy📌 low cost 🔧 Glue syringe or needle-tip applicator, wood glue or low-viscosity epoxy, drill with 1/16-inch bit, clamps, toothpicks, damp cloth