Buckeye burl is trash wood...needs a monster core. DBK does full splice in its purest form. Unfortunately the way he has to cut the pieces it would surely explode most every piece he tries. If you will notice most every wood he uses is pretty dense and straight grained and even then it's dangerous as hell.
If I did that I'd hit the power feed and run in the other room
But I also use a core when necessary, if there are doubts about the stability of the straightness of the wood.
Absolutely right said, especially about the hellish danger :thumbup:. Each recut is an adventure for me. Therefore, only a straight grain. The truth, it is more dangerous not for me but for the milling wood. Sometimes it is very disappointing when breaking the tip of the crown at the end of the process. In addition, each recut requires a lot of wood, for one crown about 10-12" of perfect wood. A lot goes into chips.
But I also use a core when necessary, if there are doubts about the stability of the straightness of the wood.
Larry, Jake, and Dimitry, thanks for the education. So it looks like I'll need to stay away from the burls for a full splice. What about WF bubinga, lacewood, palm wood, or possibly a rosewood for the bottom splice (larger handle section)?
-R
Guys, can anyone tell me about Hickory burl and if it's fairly stable?
-R
Larry, Jake, and Dimitry, thanks for the education. So it looks like I'll need to stay away from the burls for a full splice. What about WF bubinga, lacewood, palm wood, or possibly a rosewood for the bottom splice (larger handle section)?
-R
Hi Larry,Just in case you have not found a lacewood into ebony spliced cue yet.
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Larry
Hi Larry,
I'll take it.
Send me a price tag
RG
Larry, sorry I missed this cue! It's gorgeous. Did a Texas buyer get it?
Hope you're doing well and thanks for posting heartbreaking pics!
-Ryan
Na, it went to Borneo.
Larry