Originally Posted by jrc750
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another parris ultimate
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Originally Posted by danam1 View PostMike wooldridge olive wood shark
Edit: based on machine spliced principles but then hand finished, but this is not the normal way of making cues nowadaysLast edited by jrc750; 28 August 2014, 09:54 PM.
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Originally Posted by golferson123 View Postseriously chaps are they still people out there falling for this hype.can you think of any other products with a waiting list like that?.I would love to know how many people are in the cue sorry queue
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Originally Posted by perpetualboredom View PostIt's a shame it turns ugly brown in a few years! Definitely a pretty wood when new though.Originally Posted by danam1 View PostEasy to make look like new again with some careful sanding. I've just done mine and wished I'd taken some before and after pics.Originally Posted by Leo View PostHe said a few years which usually means more then one!
Last edited by kadobau; 29 August 2014, 12:26 AM.
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Originally Posted by Bigmeek View PostDidn't know that. For some reason I thought they would both be made the same way then a 3/4 would be cut and a joint added. Interesting.
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Originally Posted by jb134 View PostI have always held the (somewhat contentious) view that 3/4 cues made this way should not be labelled "handmade", there is nothing handmade about putting an ebony block in a lathe and turning it to a butt. It's the same process as a table leg. Yes, there are small splices put on the shaft and possibly decorative ones on the turned butt , but for me, the shaft runs the length of a handmade cue.
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Originally Posted by DandyA View Posthas anyone got a video of a 3/4 being made? I'd be interested to see ... one thing that's puzzling me (as a DIY-phobe) is how the butt is attached securely to the shaft (no jokes please) ...
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Originally Posted by DandyA View Posthas anyone got a video of a 3/4 being made? I'd be interested to see ... one thing that's puzzling me (as a DIY-phobe) is how the butt is attached securely to the shaft (no jokes please) ...
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