Taom Chalk

if Taom was $10 .... sure buy it ... $25 bucks .... LMAO im not buying it. i had 2 rounds of TAOM and i gave 1 away and sold the other ....
I bought two Taom chalks also. I too gave one away because the first one does not seem to ever wear out.
i use masters and i dont either ... no problems ..none and you can buy an entire box for $4 bucks
Masters will become even cheaper soon since many of us will be buying Taom from now on.
 
12 page thread on chalk!

Toam sure has a devoted following. Definitely nice & clean, but its lack of abrasiveness means it doesn’t have the natural tip shaping characteristic that Masters etc do. To me seems you have to maintain your tip more carefully with Toam. Not a bad thing, I’m just lazy. For home table env, I find Russian Magic to be a nice middle of the road compromise on cost, abrasiveness & cleanliness… ✌️
 
12 page thread on chalk!

Toam sure has a devoted following. Definitely nice & clean, but its lack of abrasiveness means it doesn’t have the natural tip shaping characteristic that Masters etc do. To me seems you have to maintain your tip more carefully with Toam. Not a bad thing, I’m just lazy. For home table env, I find Russian Magic to be a nice middle of the road compromise on cost, abrasiveness & cleanliness… ✌️
FWIW, I miscue way less on power draw shots with the Taom V10 than I did with the Taom Pyro. Yes, that could be a coincidence, it could be my stroke and have nothing to do with the difference in chalk, but if it’s in my head that I miscue less with the V10, I can make that stroke with more confidence.

For most (but certainly not all) of us here that are passionate about our pool and the cleanliness of our cloth and our cue balls, the advantages (cleanliness and longevity) of the V10 justify the high $ price.
 
My apologies Cookie... I thought you lived in florida, so it didn't dawn on me to reach out to you directly on the off chance you may have been in Vegas during the APA tourneys. I did mention my trip in the "how ya doing in league" thread, but who actually pays attention to that thread...lol

I did go hunting for Mr Barton, but he didn't have a booth down there when I was.
I posted a Vegas thread in the aiming forum but no one replied. John Barton doesn’t do shows anymore. He’s having so much success with his online auctions that the hassle of a show isn’t worth it. Hope you had fun, I didn’t really have fun. No real interest in Vegas anymore
 
I posted a Vegas thread in the aiming forum but no one replied. John Barton doesn’t do shows anymore. He’s having so much success with his online auctions that the hassle of a show isn’t worth it. Hope you had fun, I didn’t really have fun. No real interest in Vegas anymore
Ah... I only pop into the aiming forum on rare occasion these days. Certainly why I missed your thread.

Well that's good news for John and his business. I was unaware of his move away from shows. Glad it's for positive reasons.

Vegas has become a yearly vaca for the wife and I. The tournament honestly gets in the way...lol. The weather for us wasn't the best so time down by the pool was nearly non-existent. As long as my team continues winning, I'll be going. If I had to pull all the cash out of my wallet I'd rather experience something else. I prefer the Vegas for 20yrs ago. This new resort version isn't as exciting and far more expensive.

I'll be chasing after a US am spot next month. So if I manage to get down to Florida, I'll definitely shoot you a heads up
 
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Ah... I only pop into the aiming forum on rare occasion these days. Certainly why I missed your thread.

Well that's good news for John and his business. I was unaware of his move away from shows. Glad it's for positive reasons.

Vegas has become a yearly vaca for the wife and I. The tournament honestly gets in the way...lol. The weather for us wasn't the best so time down by the pool was nearly non-existent. As long as my team continues winning, I'll be going. If I had to pull all the cash out of my wallet I'd rather experience something else. I prefer the Vegas for 20yrs ago. This new resort version isn't as exciting and far more expensive.

I'll be chasing after a US am spot next month. So if I manage to get down to Florida, I'll definitely shoot you a heads up
Us am finals won’t be played until 2023 with no finals location announced yet. Hopefully they keep it in florida. I’m in the qualifiers next month also. Be good to meet up and hit some balls.
 
Us am finals won’t be played until 2023 with no finals location announced yet. Hopefully they keep it in florida. I’m in the qualifiers next month also. Be good to meet up and hit some balls.
Ya, I didn't know about the 2023 date until well after signing up...lol. No one's fault other than my own.

From what I hear about the usual location. It doesn't seem like there's any reason for a swap. I'm of course indifferent, unless they move it to Vegas. Can only do that place one a year.

If I happen to make it down that way for any reason. I'll be sure to reach out well prior.
 
The Super V-10 is favorite.🤯

I use vegetable Big Rubber Band to keep from rolling if I drop.
 

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12 page thread on chalk!

Toam sure has a devoted following. Definitely nice & clean, but its lack of abrasiveness means it doesn’t have the natural tip shaping characteristic that Masters etc do. To me seems you have to maintain your tip more carefully with Toam. Not a bad thing, I’m just lazy. For home table env, I find Russian Magic to be a nice middle of the road compromise on cost, abrasiveness & cleanliness… ✌️
Just when I thought I heard it all. You're saying that a material softer then your tip, specifically choosen so it can be applied to your tip, shapes you're tip as you apply it...?

If that's the case then I can now understand why some people think drilling into their chalk is a better method than swiping it on. That said, that would mean that the tips on my cues should have a 'X' pattern worn into them.

Maybe the next time I get a tip change I'll tell my mechanic not to bother shaping it for me. Instead I'll drill it into the dirt in my front yard and see how long it takes to reach a dime shaped finish.
Screenshot from 2022-08-20 11-39-37.png


Interesting theory...
 
Just when I thought I heard it all. You're saying that a material softer then your tip, specifically choosen so it can be applied to your tip, shapes you're tip as you apply it...?

If that's the case then I can now understand why some people think drilling into their chalk is a better method than swiping it on. That said, that would mean that the tips on my cues should have a 'X' pattern worn into them.

Maybe the next time I get a tip change I'll tell my mechanic not to bother shaping it for me. Instead I'll drill it into the dirt in my front yard and see how long it takes to reach a dime shaped finish.
View attachment 657210

Interesting theory...

I’m not talking about drilling it. I just find that traditional chalk when brushed properly on a well shaped tip, tends to keep it well shaped & I don’t have to do much with it. The toam being very very fine, doesn’t give same effect. Toam is super clean & great, no worries - just offering a perspective, thats all.

You emote like an arrogant dickhead just because I mentioned the fact that legacy grainy chalk has a more abrasive impact on the tip? All you world beaters out there on AZB and no other pool players experiences this? Ok, then…
 
chalk, soft, fine-grained, easily pulverized, white-to-grayish variety of limestone. Chalk is composed of the shells of such minute marine organisms as foraminifera, coccoliths, and rhabdoliths. The purest varieties contain up to 99 percent calcium carbonate in the form of the mineral calcite. The sponge spicules, diatom and radiolarian tests (shells), detrital grains of quartz, and chert nodules (flint) found in chalk contribute small amounts of silica to its composition. Small proportions of clay minerals, glauconite, and calcium phosphate also are present.
+++++
Maybe be those small particles of quartz, flint, and silica are abrasive.
And maybe pure limestone particles are harder than leather, even though limestone shears easily.
 
I do love Taom, but I've gone back to Roku 6. I don't know if it's my playing conditions or what (in my garage, with an expensive dehumidifier that keeps it around 45-55%). But I've noticed that I am continually having to pick up small pieces of the Taom chalk off of my table -- like it's breaking off in little pieces. It may be because of the midwest heat wave that we've been under - my garage temperature has been swinging from 72 degrees to 90 degrees.
 
I do love Taom, but I've gone back to Roku 6. I don't know if it's my playing conditions or what (in my garage, with an expensive dehumidifier that keeps it around 45-55%). But I've noticed that I am continually having to pick up small pieces of the Taom chalk off of my table -- like it's breaking off in little pieces. It may be because of the midwest heat wave that we've been under - my garage temperature has been swinging from 72 degrees to 90 degrees.
Do you use v10 or pyro? My pyro seems to leave occasional flakes around, but otherwise is by far the cleanest chalk I've ever used. I bought five pieces thinking that was a lifetime supply, but if v10 doesn't even leave the odd flake around then I might have to switch over (I still wish they'd just release it in blue, already).
 
v10 at home exclusively, but when I went out to play last night and I watched my mid-level opponent make a backward cut off the rail, I pulled out the Magic chalk. Balls were so beat/filthy, when I elevated just slightly to subtly masse around the edge of an intervening ball, the CB completed a full half-circle and headed back like a boomerang!
 
v10 at home exclusively, but when I went out to play last night and I watched my mid-level opponent make a backward cut off the rail, I pulled out the Magic chalk. Balls were so beat/filthy, when I elevated just slightly to subtly masse around the edge of an intervening ball, the CB completed a full half-circle and headed back like a boomerang!
lol
 
I'm a convert. V10 performing great for me. I only play at public halls.

I always had the desire....but until v10 I would never consider putting a dusty azz chalk cube in my pocket. Now it's my default.
Dig the smooth round design.


 
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Taom is a waste when you're playing on typical equipment in bars and other public venues. The tables and balls are probably already filthy, so you're not going to see much benefit.
Where it shines, and is worth every penny, is in an environment where the table and balls are kept clean. It's not typical, even on home tables, but it is refreshing to play under such conditions. I play in a private room with 4 diamonds, and the table and balls are cleaned EVERY time they are used. Skids are rare. Hands stay clean, cues stay clean. Taom just adds to that.
That is great for you.
 
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I’m not talking about drilling it. I just find that traditional chalk when brushed properly on a well shaped tip, tends to keep it well shaped & I don’t have to do much with it. The toam being very very fine, doesn’t give same effect. Toam is super clean & great, no worries - just offering a perspective, thats all.

You emote like an arrogant dickhead just because I mentioned the fact that legacy grainy chalk has a more abrasive impact on the tip? All you world beaters out there on AZB and no other pool players experiences this? Ok, then…
You can remove a glaze with the corner of a master chalk. The tip wont glaze with V10 so it's kind of a moot point.
 
Do you use v10 or pyro? My pyro seems to leave occasional flakes around, but otherwise is by far the cleanest chalk I've ever used. I bought five pieces thinking that was a lifetime supply, but if v10 doesn't even leave the odd flake around then I might have to switch over (I still wish they'd just release it in blue, already).
I've seen the flakes with pyro but never with V10. Also a hard miscue almost makes pyro tear up like plastic wrap. Not so with V10, but it takes a damn bad stroke to miscue with either.
 
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