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Date: 25 Nov 2006 15:13:37
From: JWBH
Subject: hygienic repair on chopping board


i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed with
strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips are
bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.

since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some PVA
waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the crack
up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA ?

thanks for any advice.







 
Date: 25 Nov 2006 17:14:25
From: Wilson
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board


Rip it at the crack and reglue.
WL
"JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net > wrote in message
news:B4Z9h.19240$371.8775@newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
>i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed with
> strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips are
> bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.
>
> since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some
> PVA
> waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the crack
> up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA
> ?
>
> thanks for any advice.
>
>
>




  
Date: 25 Nov 2006 17:39:24
From: JWBH
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board



"Wilson" <infomet@mindspring.com > wrote in message
news:RR_9h.3788$1s6.3601@newsread2.news.pas.earthlink.net...
> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
> WL
> "JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net> wrote in message
> news:B4Z9h.19240$371.8775@newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
>>i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed
>>with
>> strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips
>> are
>> bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.
>>
>> since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some
>> PVA
>> waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the
>> crack
>> up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA
>> ?
> thanks for any advice.
>>
> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
> WL

thanks, the question was also about PVA
>>
>>
>
>




   
Date: 25 Nov 2006 18:59:46
From: Jim Behning
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board


On Sat, 25 Nov 2006 17:39:24 GMT, "JWBH"
<blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net > wrote:

>
>"Wilson" <infomet@mindspring.com> wrote in message
>news:RR_9h.3788$1s6.3601@newsread2.news.pas.earthlink.net...
>> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
>> WL
>> "JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net> wrote in message
>> news:B4Z9h.19240$371.8775@newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
>>>i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed
>>>with
>>> strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips
>>> are
>>> bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.
>>>
>>> since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some
>>> PVA
>>> waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the
>>> crack
>>> up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA
>>> ?
>> thanks for any advice.
>>>
>> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
>> WL
>
>thanks, the question was also about PVA
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
I did a google search on pva and found some opinions.


   
Date: 25 Nov 2006 18:01:21
From: Tyke
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board


I know you asked about re-gluing, but I have to second the suggestion to rip
and reglue. Filling a crack does not feel good to me. If the wood is
moving, then the crack may reopen. Strongest method to hold things in place
is rip and re-glue.

I had a cutting board which developed cracks and like JWBH suggested, I
ripped and reglued. A few years later the board still looks good as new for
the glue joints. Lots of knife marks from repeated use.

Dave Paine.

"JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net > wrote in message
news:gd%9h.56263$TH3.16553@newsfe2-gui.ntli.net...
>
> "Wilson" <infomet@mindspring.com> wrote in message
> news:RR_9h.3788$1s6.3601@newsread2.news.pas.earthlink.net...
>> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
>> WL
>> "JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net> wrote in message
>> news:B4Z9h.19240$371.8775@newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
>>>i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed
>>>with
>>> strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips
>>> are
>>> bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.
>>>
>>> since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some
>>> PVA
>>> waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the
>>> crack
>>> up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like
>>> PVA ?
>> thanks for any advice.
>>>
>> Rip it at the crack and reglue.
>> WL
>
> thanks, the question was also about PVA
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>




 
Date: 25 Nov 2006 21:50:56
From: Edwin Pawlowski
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board



"JWBH" <blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net > wrote in message
> since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some
> PVA
> waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the crack
> up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA
> ?

The PVA will work, but it is not a good filler material. You may have to do
a few applications and some will get smeared on the to leaving a mess too.
In any case, it is not harmful or toxic.




 
Date: 26 Nov 2006 07:36:48
From: Brian Henderson
Subject: Re: hygienic repair on chopping board


On Sat, 25 Nov 2006 15:13:37 GMT, "JWBH"
<blue.star777@REMOOOOVEvirgin.net > wrote:

>i have an old and much loved wooden chopping board that is constructed with
>strips of wood that are glued together. at one place the wood strips are
>bending away from each other leaving a thin crack.
>
>since its unhygienic, i want to fill it in with something. I have some PVA
>waterproof adhesive which is quite thick and would probably fill the crack
>up well, but would this be unadvisable using a chemical adhesive like PVA ?

The best idea is not to fill the crack, but to get rid of it entirely.
I had a built-in cutting board in the kitchen that was doing the same
thing. Last summer, I removed it, cut the separating sections apart
on the tablesaw, then planed everything to a uniform and flat
thickness and reglued it together. You can't see where the cracks
ever were, it's perfectly flat and square and good for another couple
decades of use.