I haven't had a scratch on a butt or shaft that steam couldn't handle.
....wood is a miracle material.
Depends on whether the wood is removed or not from the impact. I've seen glue used with good results.
If no wood is missing, I would use steam. If you fill it, it may swell in the future causing more problems. If it is a gouge and the wood is missing, steam won't help much, then I would fill it.
I had wood missing...not really carelessness either...lent my '68 Joss to a world champ...
....he caught the corner casting on a GCII...power follow shoot.
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The corners of those GCII castings can be brutal on cues.
Professional wood workers often use an interesting technique to fill gouges and scrapes. They mix sawdust (of the same wood type) with cryo glue (super glue) and fill the area. When the patch is dry and sanded, it is totally invisible. I saw a wood carver do this once and couldn't believe the results.
Professional wood workers often use an interesting technique to fill gouges and scrapes. They mix sawdust (of the same wood type) with cryo glue (super glue) and fill the area. When the patch is dry and sanded, it is totally invisible. I saw a wood carver do this once and couldn't believe the results.
Professional wood workers often use an interesting technique to fill gouges and scrapes. They mix sawdust (of the same wood type) with cryo glue (super glue) and fill the area. When the patch is dry and sanded, it is totally invisible. I saw a wood carver do this once and couldn't believe the results.
This post made me subscribe to this thread....
...great info for furniture