[...]
I am not saying this should be the case with your financial stuff or matters of family welfare by any means. I very important [...]
There! Right there... that's the problem in a nutshell. You think you're very important, and therefore believe that any hair-brained "out-of-the-box" idea you have is pure gold. Many experts in a number of different fields have told you that your methods are not good ones, and have gone onto explain why, but you can't be bothered with such triviality. Because your one governing mantra is "[Rick] very important".
Most "thinking outside the box" turns out to be crap. Occasionally ideas generated while bucking convention can pay off, but it's fair to say the VAST majority are easily rejected upon even rudimentary analysis
In the instant case you apparently have been unable to achieve the successful results other cuemakers obtain using traditional machining processes, so instead you machine sloppy, imprecise fits and make up the difference with epoxy filler.
Doesn't matter if that epoxy is "6,500 psi" (a quantification you don't even understand). Doesn't matter if you try to obfuscate your "explanation" by combing the longest synonyms you can find - i.e., " structural encapsulation within the annulus with the threads acting a keyway anchorage embedment zones" - where simple phrasing would not only be easier but actually preferred. It doesn't matter because the entire concept of floating a joint pin in a sloppy oversize hole filled with epoxy is nothing more than an unskilled work-around to compensate for lack of machining skill.
Your resume, which you constantly and unnecessarily inject into any discussion, is very impressive. It's almost certainly a high percentage of pure bullshit, but still impressive. However, no matter what tiny amount of it is true, NONE of the experience you claim - quality inspection expert (above and below sea level), expert pilot, renowned jazz musician, multi-millionaire... - none of those skill sets have anything to do with cuemaking. It's exactly like saying you were really good with horses so you'd make a great mountain climber.
But that's okay because, as you said, "[Rick] very important".
TW