If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Hi all
I am a newbie to snooker.
I thought I would post my question here about Cue Tips.
Yesterday I bought a "new" unused Ronnie O'Sullivan Signature Series (BCE 3pc), but this is apparently old stock. Current one is 4-pc set. Anyway, the butt rubber was moldy. The seller retorted saying "will it affect your game"?
Ok, anyway today I looked the (still) unused cue tip.
It said "blue diamond". It looked a bit rounded but I am pretty sure it is unused because the cue was factory wrapped up.
However, when I touched the tip (I am total beginner), the rubber (or leather) seems to be very hard. Almost no bounce at all.
BTW, it does not look blue. More like a dirty black with spots of grey or white or dirt.
My question is: is this normal for a brand new blue diamond tip? I read that this is a tad harder than others.
The rubber is all there, just a bit "dead meat" type of hardness. Do I need to change the tip or should I just use it for a few games or a few months with plenty of chalk?
Do I need to "break in" the new tip?
I appreciate your time to read and reply. Thanks for your help.
Joe
Hi Joe,
It is quite common on brand new cues that the tip has been fitted a while ago, so the color is darker. tip can feel dull as well. After all, it is just a piece of leather, which is sibject to temperature, humidity, dust, you name it...
My advice would be to sandpaper it a bit, to see if it gets some life back. If not, then don't hesitate, change it for a brand new one and you will feel an immediate improvement
Ton Praram III Series 1 | 58" 18.4oz 9.4mm | ash shaft + 4 splices of Brazilian Rosewood | Grand Cue medium tips
I use superglue gel and I put a little on both surfaces and wipe off immediately and when it is dry put a little blob on one surface, position and clamp it for at least 30 min's and it's easy to trim. Never fails.
Thanks for sharing. Very interesting video. Btw, I've heard some people treat the tip with a hammer while retipping, to make it more dense, is that true?
Or turn the cue upside down and in a controlled vertical way let the cue bounce off a hard floor, only an inch though mind, otherwise you may end up with a multiple piece cue lol
Or turn the cue upside down and in a controlled vertical way let the cue bounce off a hard floor, only an inch though mind, otherwise you may end up with a multiple piece cue lol
I do that to ensure no air in the glue, not to bed the tip in
- as you say "controlled vertical" manner is the key
I do that to ensure no air in the glue, not to bed the tip in
- as you say "controlled vertical" manner is the key
I do the same. Bounce the cue up and down on a nice hard ( tiled) floor gets rid of any air bubbles. I have a wee "toffee hammer" which I've used but most of the time I can't be bothered and just let the tip play in naturally. I'm never in that much of a hurry. Standard practice for me is to re-tip a few weeks before the league starts. New season new tip good to go as they say.
Used to do that myself until I realised that I was not hitting the tip in the same way that I strike the cue ball - thats the point where I having put the tip on would play a few sessions, wait till it started reshape itself and then re-trim and reshape and hey presto..good to go.
Comment