How about that, a padded and form fitted case. Just what you want when it goes flying around in a tornado.
I guess this guy was happy that his guitar wasn't banging against the sides of the case in that tornado.
You are correct, this is actually this is the edited version of the response and was edited a few days after it was first published. The first version was a little bit harsher and not entirely on topic given our personal differences. In the first response I had put in some accusations that were not pertinent to the topic. Accusations that I stand behind but which didn't need to be in that piece.
I will be happy to do a side by side as you suggested. The most expensive cue I own is $1800 and I will be happy to build a bonfire and put a GTF on it right beside your Fellini with a cue of equal value in it.
You find out how long the case was in the fire and we can put both cases in the fire for an equal amount of time. We will then see which of us believes in the case or not. Frankly I don't know the exact circumstances here and so I can't know what exactly the case was subjected to. But even so I will be willing to fully immerse our GTF case into a roaring fire right alongside a Fellini case that you provide with the most expensive cue I own in it as long as you also provide a cue of equal value.
We can do this in the parking lot at the upcoming SBE. If you will ship your case and cue to a mutally agreed upon third party for escrow I will do the same and we can let the engineers on the forum devise and carry out the test.
Alternatively and perhaps more scientifically sound we should probably both purchase production cues of the same brand and model to test with. That way the build of the cue isn't a factor and the test is to see which cue if any suffers damage. I will match whatever you want to spend and we can each buy from the same maker.
Now having said that I honestly do not think that our case will do any worse than a Fellini and I have never said Fellini is a bad case or anything close to that. But I will be more than happy to allow you to destroy a Fellini if you think it will prove some point.
Just let me know if you want to do this and when you are ready to send the case and cue to escrow.
I will be happy to do a side by side as you suggested. The most expensive cue I own is $1800 and I will be happy to build a bonfire and put a GTF on it right beside your Fellini with a cue of equal value in it.
I have a unknown case with cue and chalk , I used to keep in my Peterbuilt . Got a little warm now haveing trouble getting it out of the case . . Thanks Jim
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No, we have a case that took on a fire, now its your turn. Find someone willing to put in a Bushka. The benchmark is already set.
JV
The other issue here is that any case we have Fellini or other, are substatially more valueable than a GTF. I mean really, what would you have into the case? Forty bucks, a bowl of rice and some fish? Lets be realistic here. As I said, one test has already been completed, step up to the plate.
I mean they are the most bestest designed 1x2 there is, right? It shouldn't be hard to get ONE of your happy loyal customers to ship you a Balabushka of an approximate value of 8500?
JV
I think I will do the test
In that case (no pun intended) I have a few questions:
- Are you going to do any pre-testing prior to the actual test
[*]Will it be a full burn or partial burn
[*]Can you simulate the same flame and temperature conditions as the Fellini / Balabushka burn
I'm available if you decide to hire an independent consultant to witness your testing procedures
YouTube please?
John, please do not set yourself on fire while doing this test, it will be like when you miscued during the Kamui chalk test.![]()
I think distance and cost are prohibitive.![]()
you two guy's should settle this in the parking lot of SBE.
In that case (again, no pun intended) I suggest you review the API procedures for controlled burn testing
This is China we don't follow no procedures![]()
No OSHA, WOW that's unbelievable.
Well OK, I just don't want to read about you in one of Cocobolo Cowboy's copy & paste threads.
Oh there is a TON of rules on the books. In fact the way I here it is that the safety standards are tougher than OSHA's. But the Chinese have another saying and it goes that the Emperor is far away and cannot see or something like that.
My wife's friend owns a machine shop, they make molds for styrofoam containers. Lots of heavy steel blocks and tools around. All the worker work in flip flops. I asked the owner why they don't wear steel-toed safety boots. He said he bought them for everyone but they won't wear them. Same thing in another factory with ear splitting noise, I said why don't they wear ear plugs? The foreman took me over to a cabinet with a huge full box of them. They don't like them, superstitious about them. And despite what everyone thinks there is NOT a line at the gate in front of every factory of people wanting a job. So employers give in when they know that workers SHOULD be wearing safety gear or doing something a safe way but they refuse to.
And of course some employers could care less or don't even try to provide a safe environment. And yet others DO impose the rules and their factories are run as safely as any in the USA. So it goes the whole range here.
Never Mind