Originally Posted by cueman
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Difference in cues
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Don't let the fear of losing be greater than the excitement of winning...
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I've had a couple of cues whith stained butts. As the spliceing on one was a bit on the poor side I decided i would have a play with it and sand and spray paint the butt satin black.
What I found was a cheap ebony had been used that contained a lot of filler to correct any faults of which there were plenty. This had then been overstained with a water based black stain which was easily washed away with some fine wet & dry paper.
One thing parris cues have that other cues don't is a simple wax applied to the butt which would show anything other than perfection in the ebony.
Had a bad experience myself with mastercraft and to be honest wouldn't reccomend them to anyone.Last edited by Maverick54; 31 January 2013, 05:04 AM."When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind, not with it." - Henry Ford
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Agreed some of Parris cues work isn't the best if the internet is to be believed but I do think some people are a bit hard on him.
Basically if you order from Trevor every cue is an "ultimate" because all he does is his best work.
Mikes "lower range" cues, while still material wise pretty high are butterfly spliced so you won't get anyone complaining about splices etc.
Parris effectively has ranges of cues so you can expect workmanship materials etc to be of poorer quality and at this point you are paying a premium for the badge.
I'm not saying he doesn't ever ship out substandard work but people are quick to jump on the bandwagon.sigpic A Truly Beakerific Long Pot Sir!
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If you order one you could be waiting, all anxious in anticipation, up to a year and then not like what you get.. I'd say get down to the cue makers shop. Give your self a couple of hours and have the proper experience of buying a cue, off the rack! I was in the Parris shop 6 years ago and got a stunning 3/4 traditional paragon. I was in there for 3 or 4hrs, the smell of wire wool and linseed, arr the memories
Try n buy, can't go wrong.
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Originally Posted by j6uk View PostIf you order one you could be waiting, all anxious in anticipation, up to a year and then not like what you get.. I'd say get down to the cue makers shop. Give your self a couple of hours and have the proper experience of buying a cue, off the rack! I was in the Parris shop 6 years ago and got a stunning 3/4 traditional paragon. I was in there for 3 or 4hrs, the smell of wire wool and linseed, arr the memories
Try n buy, can't go wrong.
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Originally Posted by j6uk View PostIf you order one you could be waiting, all anxious in anticipation, up to a year and then not like what you get.. I'd say get down to the cue makers shop. Give your self a couple of hours and have the proper experience of buying a cue, off the rack! I was in the Parris shop 6 years ago and got a stunning 3/4 traditional paragon. I was in there for 3 or 4hrs, the smell of wire wool and linseed, arr the memories
Try n buy, can't go wrong.
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Yes the cue maker should be able to give you a hard tube so you can put it in the hold. You could try the old emerald charm and blag it on by saying its a wooden flute, apparently you can take musical instruments on the plan. I took half a cue to be spliced by JP by saying that at Krakow airport be, just a little, harder at a London airport.Last edited by j6uk; 3 February 2013, 09:54 AM.
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