I voted other. I like GC's but if you have ever shot on a Metro with double shimed pocket, you would fall in love with it. Its like a Diamond along the rails with the pocket inserts . Just a great table.--Smitty
Personally I like Diamond better than Gold Crown, and the fact that the V copied the pockets of Diamond should say something. LOL
Not for nothing, but if we are talking about who copied whom, Brunswick,
and plenty of other table manufacturers, built tables with 4 1/2 inch
corner pockets about 100 years before the Diamond boys were born.
I'm just sayin'...
Dale
Timely poll - looking to get a table for the home finally, and have seen a few GC 1's, 3's, and 4's out there. Not sure what I'll end up with yet, but curious to see the feedback and results!
Scott
Interestingly, I was just talking to the hall owner yesterday about rail rubber. My Sport King is over 46 years old & the rubber has not been changed & is still excellent. It might be real rubber & not some compound. I do not really know. It might also be the 'weather' conditions under which it has been kept. It's an interesting question.
Regards,
Really...name one?Brunswick's tournament edition GC4&5's have 4 9/16" corner pockets, not 4 1/2" as most would like to believe
...and inconsistent pocket sizes from one corner to the next. I'm not knocking GC's, but believe me, they're NO BETTER than the mechanic that works on them, and neither is a Diamond for that matter. A great table mechanic can take shit and turn it into ART, but a bad table mechanic can take the best tables built...and turn them into SHIT in NO TIME at all. There is no such thing as a bad Gold Crown, they're all almost the same design with a few minor changes from one design to the next, but Diamond didn't copy Brunswick to get their tables to play the way they do today, that's all Diamond, just like a Gold Crown is all Brunswick. Either table is a great table to own, but look at the resale value of the Gold Crowns vs the resale of Diamond's, that SHOULD tell you something overall
Glen
You're half right - and me a mathematical genius - Greg was prolly born
around 1945 give or take, since 1845 was the year John Brunswick
made his first table in Cincinnati, let's say 50 years.
BTW - perhaps you could use your delicate little finger to point out exactly
where I said in my post that GCs were better than Diamonds, 'Cause I can't find it.
Arcade
Regent
Brilliant Novelty
Kling
Hudson
Urban League
Regina
Arcadian
The 5 x 10 Cenntenials used in World Championship tourneys
untill 1950.
Are you bored yet?
Dale(without looking at the Brunswick site)
None of the tables you mentioned had factory built 4 1/2" pocketsthey were 5" or bigger
![]()
Thanks Southpaw....those are 4.5 from the factory?
R
I know many Gold Crowns from the 60's that play well with original rubber.
...and a few Anniversaries.
The GC-1V is a nice table but the ones I've played are already showing
some soft spots in the rails...ball banks a little wide and slow, you hit one
inch farther and it banks normal.
I had a GC-1 re-rubbered with Super Speed 4 years ago...it needs new
rubber and it's gonna be Artemis.
Haven't played on a GC-V yet.
The North American auto industry was taken over by the money men in
the early 50's ( before that, the car-freak engineers had the last word )
We the public paid for that with cars that were inferior until imports
made them mend their ways.....
..I gotta feeling Brunswick has gone this route.
I've been lurking here at AZ for years and only recently joined and started posting. My vote is GCII. Pretty much the same as GCI with leg levelers. When I was finally ready for a table I knew I wanted an original Gold Crown for several reasons. 1. Can't afford new. 2. Prefer nostalgic vintage stuff, this was THE table when I was a kid. 3. When you ask a master level player if they would like to come over to shoot pool the first question they ask is what kind of table do you have. When you say "a 9ft. Gold Crown I" they ask what time to be there. I found a bunch of info on the GC's here on AZ when researching the differences. From what I learned my table is probably what some refer to as a GC 1-1/2. Supposedly the first GC's had no leg levelers but they started using them before officially going to a GC2. I think there was also a change in the way the rails bolt to the slate. Also mine has the original red monarch cushions and still plays great, at around 50yrs. old! Newer versions got lower quality rubber and don't last like the old ones. I also learned that they went downhill as they progressed and cheapened up the frames (GC3's), but can be modified to overcome their shortcomings. I really don't know anything about the GC5's except that I can't afford one. This one was $1000 but cost another $1000 to ship from Cincinnati to Chicago burbs with professional installation and simonis 860 tournament blue. Someday if I have the money I'd like to get the plastic skirts replaced.
I've been lurking here at AZ for years and only recently joined and started posting. My vote is GCII. Pretty much the same as GCI with leg levelers. When I was finally ready for a table I knew I wanted an original Gold Crown for several reasons. 1. Can't afford new. 2. Prefer nostalgic vintage stuff, this was THE table when I was a kid. 3. When you ask a master level player if they would like to come over to shoot pool the first question they ask is what kind of table do you have. When you say "a 9ft. Gold Crown I" they ask what time to be there. I found a bunch of info on the GC's here on AZ when researching the differences. From what I learned my table is probably what some refer to as a GC 1-1/2. Supposedly the first GC's had no leg levelers but they started using them before officially going to a GC2. I think there was also a change in the way the rails bolt to the slate. Also mine has the original red monarch cushions and still plays great, at around 50yrs. old! Newer versions got lower quality rubber and don't last like the old ones. I also learned that they went downhill as they progressed and cheapened up the frames (GC3's), but can be modified to overcome their shortcomings. I really don't know anything about the GC5's except that I can't afford one. This one was $1000 but cost another $1000 to ship from Cincinnati to Chicago burbs with professional installation and simonis 860 tournament blue. Someday if I have the money I'd like to get the plastic skirts replaced.
My table mechanic says that the GC I is the best built.
The GC1 was carpenters union made , everything overbuilt to last. mine is 50 this year and it plays great. Original red rubber and double shimmed to 4 3\8 corners. Best to wait for a gc1 avoid the 3 as said before.