Do Triangle Tips come in only one hardness? I have a Triangle Tip on a cue I just acquired that feels like a medium tip. Aren't Triangles a hard tip?
Thanks.
It's a crap shoot. Most single layer tips vary in hardnesses, not necessarily by design - You by a box of 50 and if someone had a hardness measuring device, you woul dbe surprised at the variances. It's like Forrest Gump's mother used to say about a box of chocolates: you never know what you're going to get.
This is one reason that the layered tips became so popular, you do have an idea of what you'll get.
Dave
I was thinking of trying a triangle because I thought they were about medium. I need a little softer tip. My first tip was the everest that comes stock on the OB1, and I get at least a couple of miscues a day. Now I have a kumai medium and I am still get a couple of miscues a day. I have a good stroke but it happens when i am trying to put extreme draw or spin on the ball. What do you guys recommend? I want a tip that grabs but doesn't need maintainance and doesnt come apart in about 3 months like a moori can.
I was thinking of trying a triangle because I thought they were about medium. I need a little softer tip. My first tip was the everest that comes stock on the OB1, and I get at least a couple of miscues a day. Now I have a kumai medium and I am still get a couple of miscues a day. I have a good stroke but it happens when i am trying to put extreme draw or spin on the ball. What do you guys recommend? I want a tip that grabs but doesn't need maintainance and doesnt come apart in about 3 months like a moori can.
Do the super softs hold up well over time? need little maintanance?
Do Triangle Tips come in only one hardness? I have a Triangle Tip on a cue I just acquired that feels like a medium tip. Aren't Triangles a hard tip?
Thanks.
Hi there,
the triangle tip is one of the best tips on the market. The bad thing is that the tip gets ruined when it's cut down or gets too hot from sanding or burnishing on the lathe.
I put my own on. I use epoxy. Two part and mix it. I just set the tip on the ferrul with very little pressure so I don't sqweaze out to much of the epoxy. I put duck tape around the ferrul so I get no glue on it.
Once it's dried I sand down the side by hand using 400 wet dry sand paper wraped around a 1"x2" 4" long piece of wood. Using it kind of like a fingernail file I sand on the edges until it's flush with the ferrul.
Once I get it close to being done I switch to another little block of wood that I have finer sand paper.
Then I just wet the side of the tip a little bit and burnish it with some regular old cardboard.
When this tip is taken down slowly like this you will have one of the best tips you ever had on your cue. It responds great and will keep it's shape real good. Hardly no mushrooming or fraying on the sides at all.
It will also keep it's bounce for a while also. Most tips that are put on and turned down quick get the leather torn too quickly. Therefor the tip gets real hard real quick from sqwashing out reshaping.
This will give you a great tip for about 3 weeks to a month. As with most tips after that they just get kind of hard and compressed. But for .75 each you can afford to change it once a month.
Anyone that reads this should try this.
Seeing,using is believing. And when you do it like this there is not a bad tip in the box. They all play exactly the same.
I thought about making a little video on how to do this. All these other tips cost too much and they don't play any better if you do it like this.
Have a great day Try it you'll like it. Geno............
Some of the pros I've mingled with in the past use a triangle. They arn't sponsored by then either. They use them because they work great if they are put on right.:clapping:
thanks genomac: was haveing trouble with lepro it seemed to keep geting
a sharp edge around tip ,did not know what to call it , would turn it in lathe
to clean it up would come right back "fraying" is the word. did not like it.
i don't like looking down cue to see chalk caked on edge of tip.
changed over to tringle ,much better. think i like the hit and feel better
than lee, i will try the vice next time i retip.
thanks , john107:anderson sc
I was thinking of trying a triangle because I thought they were about medium. I need a little softer tip. My first tip was the everest that comes stock on the OB1, and I get at least a couple of miscues a day. Now I have a kumai medium and I am still get a couple of miscues a day. I have a good stroke but it happens when i am trying to put extreme draw or spin on the ball. What do you guys recommend? I want a tip that grabs but doesn't need maintainance and doesnt come apart in about 3 months like a moori can.