When we moved into this house two and a half years ago, the previous owner left a sitting bench on the front porch. The seating area is made of mystery wood slats and the ends with arm rests as well as the center of the back support were cast metal...presumably low grade cast iron based on the fact it rusted a little. It was pretty rickety and it was time to do something about it...either trash it or rebuild it. Well...I chose the latter. The metal was in good condition other than the lack of a good protective finish (only one small broken part that would not affect a rebuild). The wood...needed to go bye-bye. Now, this is not a "fine woodworking" type project; rather, it's another repurposing/rejuvenating effort that can be just as rewarding. There were three pieces to this effort: cleaning up and refinishing the metal components, replacing the wood components and upgrading the hardware that holds it together to substantially stouter hardware.
Here's the "before"...yea, it looks terrible and oh, how wiggly.![]()
No amount of tightening existing hardware was going to fix that, either.
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The first step was complete disassembly.
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Having the existing wood in-hand, I calculated the board feet required for replacement material and headed off to Bucks County Hardwoods to pick up some white oak. 'Gonna use the good stuff for this one. It's expensive these days, but using the right material counts big-time for an outdoor project. Yes, the bench will be under cover, but it's outside. I bought a little more material than needed, but it will not go to waste I'm sure.
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The seat slats are about as basic as can be, but the seat back has to be an assembly that fits around the metal insert. The obvious path was to use the existing back, top rail as a pattern for creating a new one. I actually ended up using that piece to make a 1/4" template because the edges of the original were beveled in a way that would preclude pattern routing to clean up the initially bandsawn component.
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