Originally Posted by jrc750
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'Hand Made' Cues - Do they have any inherent value?
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostLOL! Bending a cue back into shape is not a good idea. It weakens the wood fibres and it will move out of shape very easily in future. Much better to take some time and water it. But, if you're as good as Hendry, don't bother!:biggrin-new:
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Originally Posted by Shockerz View PostDid you hang it and water it?Last edited by Big Splash!; 3 August 2016, 05:21 PM.
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostNo, but that sounds like a good idea. I'd lay it down, dip me finger in a cup of water, then apply it to the inner side of the bend, to induce expansion against the bend, covering about 90 degrees of the cue topside. I'd only dab enough water on so that it didn't drip. Allow it to dry, then repeat. This is especially effective on maple. Which is good because a lot of old maple cues are bent. Old straight seems to be the exception with maple. Another reason to avoid it. Unless it's an Aurora built from 200yr old swamp maple! :biggrin-new: I don't think that would warp given it's been under water for that long and then air-dried.
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostDear, oh dear, oh dear.
You obviously don't know much about Powerglide because Hendry's cue was maple, not AD ash! Their maple of choice was Canadian rock though I forget if it was Black or Sugar maple or if they used both. It left the factory straight and bent under hot lights in a display case as Jonny points out.
After it broke he seemed to have real trouble playing with a straight one, guess his cue action was built around that cue, depending on where he held it in regards to the bend; could be the bend helped him to not cue across the ball, who the hell knows, apart from you that is.
BTW nice picture of that pointed stick you made, you see you can post photos, pity you forgot to lay your three air dried cues next to it for us all to have a look at.
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Originally Posted by Shockerz View PostI bought a few old warped cues and sanded them down, hung them and used to tried watering them, soaking them, leaving them in the garage through the winter, none of it made too much difference as regards making them straight by hanging......not for me anyway!
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostIt may be that after many years, that they won't move back. I did a Riley trapezoid plate cue and I could induce movement with water. But a JD 147 maple with a double bend took me a year to correct and refinish. A real pain. Once it was done, it was the best JD147 I'd ever seen though Inevermissblue's JD147 at 56.5'' may well be as good I would guess. Lovely hit even though it was maple. I played with it a bit then sold it. It was just a tad light for me at 16ish oz. Some cues are just lost causes! :biggrin-new:
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Originally Posted by billabong View PostWon't it take 12 - 24 years to get that air dried equilibrium back into the cue ?
The offending cue:
The cue was covered in an orange lacquer to begin with, the plate barely visible. I had to sand the whole thing down. Luckily, the ferrule was 11mm, so losing half a mill off the cue was ok. Still quite a fat taper afterwards, a real glider over the bridge, and a wide 31mm butt. Lovely to hold, felt proper!
And no machines!Last edited by Big Splash!; 4 August 2016, 01:09 PM.
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Looks nice, I do love the feel of maple.
Sure I've got one of those upstairs, have to have a look and see if it's straight (or sold!).
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostOriginally Posted by billabong View PostWon't it take 12 - 24 years to get that air dried equilibrium back into the cue ?
The offending cue:
The cue was covered in an orange lacquer to begin with, the plate barely visible. I had to sand the whole thing down. Luckily, the ferrule was 11mm, so losing half a mill off the cue was ok. Still quite a fat taper afterwards, a real glider over the bridge, and a wide 31mm butt. Lovely to hold, felt proper!
And no machines!
Would that not be nicotine-staining, after years being in the smoke filled clubs.
I have an old maple cue that is a golden yellow from smokeLast edited by DeanH; 4 August 2016, 05:58 PM.Up the TSF! :snooker:
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lol you're getting the hang of it! :wink:Up the TSF! :snooker:
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Originally Posted by DeanH View PostOrange lacquer?
Would that not be nicotine-staining, after years being in the smoke filled clubs.
I have an old maple cue that is a golden yellow from smoke
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'Hand Made' Cues - Do they have any inherent value?
no need to be rude
old cues did not have "orange lacquer" applied but a varnish or oil that changed colour with age and if they where in a smokey environment the nicotine also reacted with the ageing finish. It was not a wipe off coating but a chemical reaction with the ageing finish.
And yes I read a post wrong but cleared that mistake quickly
FACTLast edited by DeanH; 4 August 2016, 09:01 PM.Up the TSF! :snooker:
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Originally Posted by DeanH View Postno need to be rude
old cues did not have "orange lacquer" applied but a varnish or oil that changed colour with age and if they where in a smokey environment the nicotine also reacted with the ageing finish. It was not a wipe off coating but a chemical reaction with the ageing finish.
And yes I read a post wrong but cleared that mistake quickly
FACTLast edited by Big Splash!; 5 August 2016, 07:59 AM.
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