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JB weld chair repair


Accord4tehloss!

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2008
Messages
51
City
Cincinnati OH
Vehicle Year
1994
Transmission
Manual
Well my computer chair started cracking near the mount. I am too poor right now to replace it. If I still had my small mig welder I could have layed a quick bead and been done with it. Since I don't I tried JB weld. I cleaned the area with rubbing alcohol and got the JB weld in the crack under and on top of it. Think it will hold?


chair.jpg
 
10 bucks says you fall on your @$$ within a week...

I hope not. Its not broken all the way through though just the front I caught it in time. I only noticed it because it was leaning a little bit. Put the JB weld in the seam and bent it back straight.
 
JB is strong stuff. You should not have a problem as long as you take it easy on the chair. Nice work:icon_thumby:
 
I have never seen a JB weld repair last long. something about elasticity in epoxy ........ MAKG could explain better...... i never claimed to be proficient in physics.
 
Hmmm well I am only 145 lbs hopefully it will last a little bit. And it was holding my weight before i fixed it. This is just to keep it from breaking more. O well would suck if it broke. I am sitting on an old computer case for a chair lol
 
you can have my old one when I buy my new sportier chair. all you would have to do is pick it up.
 
I have never seen a JB weld repair last long. something about elasticity in epoxy ........ MAKG could explain better...... i never claimed to be proficient in physics.

Your right the second I leaned back it broke dammit!
 
JB Weld works great for a lot of things. Unfortunately this isn't one of them.

Maybe try taking it down to a muffler shop or somewhere and see if the guy will weld it for like 10 bucks no receipt or something.

BTW, I had to look at my chair as well after seeing this lol, same chinese mechanism thingy. Fortunately no crack found though.
 
Needed a heavier bead of the stuff. In this case, it isn't glue. It's a structural material. You should have ground the crack out with the edge of a grinding wheel then laid in a good 1/4" bead of the stuff. Or used it to glue a metal plate over the top of the crack.
 

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