How do I repair my stair bannister?












4















My stairs bannister are made of small wood posts nailed to the ramp. The whole thing have always been quite fragile. After 10 years, a couple posts came loose and most show a gap between the posts and ramp.



I know how to use a screwdriver and screw, but I've never done any woodworking with nails. I only have basic equipment (hammer, various screws, screwdriver).



What would be the simplest fix? What nails do I need? What tools should I use to solidify the whole ramp?enter image description hereenter image description here










share|improve this question



























    4















    My stairs bannister are made of small wood posts nailed to the ramp. The whole thing have always been quite fragile. After 10 years, a couple posts came loose and most show a gap between the posts and ramp.



    I know how to use a screwdriver and screw, but I've never done any woodworking with nails. I only have basic equipment (hammer, various screws, screwdriver).



    What would be the simplest fix? What nails do I need? What tools should I use to solidify the whole ramp?enter image description hereenter image description here










    share|improve this question

























      4












      4








      4








      My stairs bannister are made of small wood posts nailed to the ramp. The whole thing have always been quite fragile. After 10 years, a couple posts came loose and most show a gap between the posts and ramp.



      I know how to use a screwdriver and screw, but I've never done any woodworking with nails. I only have basic equipment (hammer, various screws, screwdriver).



      What would be the simplest fix? What nails do I need? What tools should I use to solidify the whole ramp?enter image description hereenter image description here










      share|improve this question














      My stairs bannister are made of small wood posts nailed to the ramp. The whole thing have always been quite fragile. After 10 years, a couple posts came loose and most show a gap between the posts and ramp.



      I know how to use a screwdriver and screw, but I've never done any woodworking with nails. I only have basic equipment (hammer, various screws, screwdriver).



      What would be the simplest fix? What nails do I need? What tools should I use to solidify the whole ramp?enter image description hereenter image description here







      wood ramp






      share|improve this question













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      asked 12 hours ago









      JeffreyJeffrey

      535415




      535415






















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          Those wooden circles are plugs that will pry out of the holes in the balusters. Under that would be a pre-drilled hole for a screw (typically). I would have never used nails on this in the first place.



          The correct fix is going to be to remove the nails and replace them with screws that fit into the existing holes snugly. If there is really just a nail hole, you may want to pre-drill a larger hole (sized appropriately for the screws you choose) and then drive in screws. An electric driver is going to be the best for this unless you only have a few to repair. A manual screw driver is going to get tiring and hard to use very quickly.



          Once they are screwed into place, the wooden plugs can be tapped (maybe with some glue) back into place.






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            1 Answer
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            active

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            active

            oldest

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            15














            Those wooden circles are plugs that will pry out of the holes in the balusters. Under that would be a pre-drilled hole for a screw (typically). I would have never used nails on this in the first place.



            The correct fix is going to be to remove the nails and replace them with screws that fit into the existing holes snugly. If there is really just a nail hole, you may want to pre-drill a larger hole (sized appropriately for the screws you choose) and then drive in screws. An electric driver is going to be the best for this unless you only have a few to repair. A manual screw driver is going to get tiring and hard to use very quickly.



            Once they are screwed into place, the wooden plugs can be tapped (maybe with some glue) back into place.






            share|improve this answer






























              15














              Those wooden circles are plugs that will pry out of the holes in the balusters. Under that would be a pre-drilled hole for a screw (typically). I would have never used nails on this in the first place.



              The correct fix is going to be to remove the nails and replace them with screws that fit into the existing holes snugly. If there is really just a nail hole, you may want to pre-drill a larger hole (sized appropriately for the screws you choose) and then drive in screws. An electric driver is going to be the best for this unless you only have a few to repair. A manual screw driver is going to get tiring and hard to use very quickly.



              Once they are screwed into place, the wooden plugs can be tapped (maybe with some glue) back into place.






              share|improve this answer




























                15












                15








                15







                Those wooden circles are plugs that will pry out of the holes in the balusters. Under that would be a pre-drilled hole for a screw (typically). I would have never used nails on this in the first place.



                The correct fix is going to be to remove the nails and replace them with screws that fit into the existing holes snugly. If there is really just a nail hole, you may want to pre-drill a larger hole (sized appropriately for the screws you choose) and then drive in screws. An electric driver is going to be the best for this unless you only have a few to repair. A manual screw driver is going to get tiring and hard to use very quickly.



                Once they are screwed into place, the wooden plugs can be tapped (maybe with some glue) back into place.






                share|improve this answer















                Those wooden circles are plugs that will pry out of the holes in the balusters. Under that would be a pre-drilled hole for a screw (typically). I would have never used nails on this in the first place.



                The correct fix is going to be to remove the nails and replace them with screws that fit into the existing holes snugly. If there is really just a nail hole, you may want to pre-drill a larger hole (sized appropriately for the screws you choose) and then drive in screws. An electric driver is going to be the best for this unless you only have a few to repair. A manual screw driver is going to get tiring and hard to use very quickly.



                Once they are screwed into place, the wooden plugs can be tapped (maybe with some glue) back into place.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 10 hours ago









                brhans

                2,75611222




                2,75611222










                answered 12 hours ago









                JPhi1618JPhi1618

                10.3k12347




                10.3k12347






























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