Project Patio 1-1/2 Outdoor Wrought Iron Patio Furniture Chair and Table Glide (20-Pack)
This wrought iron patio chair glide fits inside a round steel weld cup with an inside diameter of 1-1/2″ When measuring your chair’s weld cup, measure the inside diameter. A ridge circling the outside of the glide will be shaved off when installed, assuring a tight fit and securing the glide in the weld cup. —————– Installation Tips Use pliers to remove old cups. Clean all dirt and rust off chair foot before installing new cup. This will help make installing the cups easier and make them last longer. Insert one of the cups at and angle in the the wrought iron chair foot and use a screwdriver to press the the other side in. If necessary, soaking the glides in hot water helps to soften them up making installation easier.
Product Features
- MEASURE inner diameter of chair or table foot cup BEFORE ordering – The most common size is 1.5″ inches. Package Includes 20 replacement pieces
- 1-1/2″ GLIDE installs INSIDE the metal cup on the bottom of the chair or table feet of wrought iron patio furniture with a inside diameter of 1-1/2″
- NON-SCRATCHING patio chair glide will not leave marks on your patio surface.
- PROTECTS your patio surface, patio chair feet and patio legs from damage.
- PROVIDES smoother movement of furniture. Patio chair insert slides over the floor. The Project Patio brand is sold exclusively by Jekm Brands Inc. BEWARE of imitations of lesser quality from other suppliers.
Glad to find these replacement sliders Quick delivery and relatively easy to install. After the first one or two of went pretty quickly. I microwaved a cup of water for two minutes, dropped them in 8 at a time and let them warm up for about two or three minutes. Easy and I didn’t break or destroy any of them through replacing twenty of them. Getting the old caps out was the hardest part, but that got easier with practice as well.I had to replace black caps, but the white was about half the price. The caps are pretty much…
A snap once I figured out the trick I tried soaking in boiling water, the hammer method, as well as prying them in with a screwdriver, but there was way too much swearing and it was obvious the danged things werenât going in. An hour later I discovered the secret… warm first, then set one end of the insert in place. Then hold the lower jaw of a channel lock on the metal outside of the part of the plastic you set in place. With the upper jaw squash the other end of the plastic. Youâll have to readjust your bite a couple of times…
It works!