Hockey Pucks and wood restoration kit rescue a cedar garden bench

Frank Pellow

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Joined
Jan 16, 2007
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I built a garden bench out of construction grade cedar 2x4s a few years ago and left it outside winter and summer in direct contact with the ground.  I should have known better.  [embarassed]

When I examined the bench closely, I found that the feet were beginning to rot:

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I first cut about 1 centimetre off both feet:

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I decided to try this wood restoration kit:

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that I found at Lee Valley: http://www.leevalley.com/en/wood/page.aspx?p=20075&cat=1,190,42997

The first step was to mix up the liquid wood stabilizer and pour it onto most of the bottom of the feet.  After allowing that to dry for a day, I mixed up the wood filler.  Just kneading it by hand worked best:

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I applied this "putty" by hand to fill the remaining holes:

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After drying for a couple of hours, I sanded it:

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The colour does not match, of course, but its just at the bottom of an outside bench and I don't think that it will be noticed.  I believe that I could have added dye when mixing the putty and I will probably try this the next time that I use this kit.

If I stopped at this point, the legs would just rot again in a few years.  I searched for appropriate feet but could not find any.  Then, it occurred to me that there was a very good and cheap solution to the problem.  Use hockey pucks (being Canadian, I should have thought of this sooner  [embarassed]).   So, that's what I did:

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Alex said:
Clever idea to use hockey pucks. Did you paint/lacquer the repaired spots?

Thanks.  I covered the repaired spots with the same stain (Sikens) that Is on the rest of the bench
 
Funny thing, I just put hockey pucks under my workbench legs tonight to elevate it up a bit for use as the outfeed table to my table saw.  And then I read the title of this thread.

I ordered mine from Lee Valley about a month ago to use for stabilizing material during hand routing.  I originally saw the Rockler bench cookies, but I order a lot from Lee Valley so I decided to try theirs.  I was amused that they were hockey pucks, and came with round discs of anti-slip material to stick on each side. 

I have not anchored them to the legs yet, but they sure seem to grip well on my concrete floor.
 
PaulMarcel said:
Awesome solution! Once the lake freezes up, you should take the bench out... should slide nicely!

Paul-Marcel,

You and Ron Paulk are responsible for me diving into this Festool addiction big time!  I've learned a lot from your videos  After watching your videos, I ordered some Qwas Dogs and Rail Dogs, and I didn't even own a single Festool!  (When you have the accessories, then you can justify buying the tool that uses them ...)

I've built my own "MFT-XL" using a homemade CNC-milled top (36" X 84").  I almost built the Paulk workbench, but since I didn't need portability, I decided to make it like a more traditional stationary workbench.  The hockey pucks are the under the 4X4 legs.  I did get my track saw yesterday.  Here is the link to the bench:

http://festoolownersgroup.com/member-projects/home-built-%27mft-xl%27-workbench/

 
Oh, nice write-up, Leer! At least I can say that you only admitted to maybe $50 directly from my videos then the rest was because, well, those accessories needed tools to go with them :)  (trying to not get killed by wives)

Ron's bench is really nice. If I didn't already have enough benches, I would have adapted one to my shop.

I should take my team's pucks and recommission them as bench risers; it's been probably 5 seasons since any of them were 'round'
 
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