I need to restore the Victorian staircase in my home as the treads are cracked, worn and not level.
I took the facade off under the stairs and the stairs have been built in a manner I’m not familiar with. As you might be able to make out there is a message from a long gone carpenter saying ‘Repaird in 1876’ so these stairs have been there a while. I would like to save as much of the original stairs as possible.
It seems the treads are just nailed to the risers with no notch in the treads. I’m surprised it’s managed to stay together this long (if the message is legit). The stringers are just a straight length of timber and it appears the treads have dropped as the edges have worn where they’ve rubbed against the stringers.
I was thinking to drive some long wedges between the back of the treads and the stringers to re-level them, then reinforce the treads with 18mm ply. Also, reinforce the risers and add glue blocks. Basically rebuild a ply skeleton of the stairs from below.
Then to cut away the timber that has worn on the top front edge of the treads from a million footsteps and glue in some new timber, cut and sanded to look original.
Thoughts?
I took the facade off under the stairs and the stairs have been built in a manner I’m not familiar with. As you might be able to make out there is a message from a long gone carpenter saying ‘Repaird in 1876’ so these stairs have been there a while. I would like to save as much of the original stairs as possible.
It seems the treads are just nailed to the risers with no notch in the treads. I’m surprised it’s managed to stay together this long (if the message is legit). The stringers are just a straight length of timber and it appears the treads have dropped as the edges have worn where they’ve rubbed against the stringers.
I was thinking to drive some long wedges between the back of the treads and the stringers to re-level them, then reinforce the treads with 18mm ply. Also, reinforce the risers and add glue blocks. Basically rebuild a ply skeleton of the stairs from below.
Then to cut away the timber that has worn on the top front edge of the treads from a million footsteps and glue in some new timber, cut and sanded to look original.
Thoughts?