AZers, I've had many re-finish work on cues. Some come back the same with even points and others that were once staggered come back even and what was once even points come back staggered. Can someone explain how this happens?
Yours Truly,
a non cue maker
Because they emerge from the cue at an angle, at the very tips of the points they are almost on the surface. A little sanding will in effect erase them and they shorten. I have made cues where the points were not exactly perfect but almost. All it takes is a little careful sanding on the high points to make everything even.
Some cue makers use razor blades to shave off some overlapping tips to make them even.
On refinish, if the re-finisher spin sands the cue, the points' tips show their real lengths .
Pretty much that ^. IMO, there's no excuse for noticeably uneven points. The extra work it takes to line them up can make the difference between a cue maker being perceived as high level or hack. Points are for aesthetic purposes. If the guy doesn't care enough to true up the points, where else is he slacking off? If he makes the effort to make them right, then it's a safe bet he is detail conscious everywhere else, too.
"Attention" period is why I only allow a few makers to work on my cues. I've seen too many that don't pay any...
What I described can't be done with badly done points. But if they are just off like a few mm's so little that you can't really see it. You can put the cue between centers and rotate it with a fixed point to check them.
Then with a little sanding you can correct them to pretty much zero. So perfect if someone doesn't know how you did it, they are astounded. They are not off even a thousandth.
If the points are off more than just a few mm, the maker did something wrong long before the cue was finished initially. Either it warped before final cut, or the "A" joint was done off center.
What do you use your cues for? Gardening?
I've been using the same player for years without a scratch/ding and I'm not a particularly careful person.
I should have not used the term MM's That may be kind of a lot.
I do. It's attention to detail. In a refinish, if something comes off, it should be put back before the new finish is applied. That's what a competent maker would do. No matter how great a maker is, points do not always come out even. In fact, it rarely happens, especially with cues that have narrow & long points like I make. A 4-point cue with shorter, wide points is very easy to keep even because of the severe angle they're cut at. Not so easy with long, narrow points. The angle is quite shallow, making them significantly more susceptible to unevenness due to the slightest movement or off center. There's a reason you don't see many guys making cues with multiples of long points. Many more guys make 4-pointers. Even 6-pointers are greatly more "user friendly" than 8-pointers, because they have room to be wider. Anybody who cuts points, especially regularly, understands these things. A refinish should be no big issue.
Case in point, three forearms here. All have very long, very narrow points, with recut points inside of base points. Two of these forearms required minor adjustment of point tips to make them even. Can anybody see which ones? No. And if they can then I did a bad job. I'm pretty confident that the points will remain even during a refinish where the cue gets sanded, but if they do fluctuate a little, it would be nice if the guy doing the job would even them back up before applying the new finish. I would. Even if I refinish somebody else's cue, I would attempt to get the points even. It's his name on the cue, not mine, but it's a respectful courtesy as I'd hope he would do the same for me.
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Pretty much that ^. IMO, there's no excuse for noticeably uneven points. The extra work it takes to line them up can make the difference between a cue maker being perceived as high level or hack. Points are for aesthetic purposes. If the guy doesn't care enough to true up the points, where else is he slacking off? If he makes the effort to make them right, then it's a safe bet he is detail conscious everywhere else, too.