Aloha,
I noticed Wang Can using a break sleeve a couple of years back and it gave me the idea to make one of my own.
I snagged one of those cardboard thingies that they set on the tables in bars and restaurants to advertise food and beverages and then improvised like McGuyver.
I cut it into about a 4-inch long piece, trimmed it up a bit, and then rolled it into a cylinder and put wide Scotch tape over it to keep the moisture of my hands from making it damp and unusable.
It isn't fancy, but it serves the purpose and makes the stick slide through your bridge super quick on the break by eliminating most of the friction and drag. As long as you don't drag it over the tip of the cue, it stays chalk-free on the inside and kind of polishes your shaft in the process of using it.
I was going to fabricate some of my own with maybe some Hawaiian Brian logo's to give away to the people in the pool hall.
I noticed Wang Can using a break sleeve a couple of years back and it gave me the idea to make one of my own.
I snagged one of those cardboard thingies that they set on the tables in bars and restaurants to advertise food and beverages and then improvised like McGuyver.
I cut it into about a 4-inch long piece, trimmed it up a bit, and then rolled it into a cylinder and put wide Scotch tape over it to keep the moisture of my hands from making it damp and unusable.
It isn't fancy, but it serves the purpose and makes the stick slide through your bridge super quick on the break by eliminating most of the friction and drag. As long as you don't drag it over the tip of the cue, it stays chalk-free on the inside and kind of polishes your shaft in the process of using it.
I was going to fabricate some of my own with maybe some Hawaiian Brian logo's to give away to the people in the pool hall.