If by saying laminated rails you mean the rails were covered in some kind of laminate product that looked like wood, I have to say that every Big G I ever saw had that kind of rails.
Not all Gandys were the commercial Big G model.
This is kind of the bottom line. You could go to Gandy and buy 9 foot big G' tables out the door for $600.00. That is why so many new pool rooms back then choose them.I keep checking my thread here to see if anybody might have something positive to say about a Gandy, which would in turn free me up to consider one. But so far, it ain't happening.
I'm sure glad I didn't realize how awful they were back in the late '60s and '70s. I would have missed out on a lot of fun!
Hi RKC. Don't know how old you are, but did you ever come to
Weenie Beenie's room in arlington va in the 70's? The tables were gandy but they had
what looked like laminated rails similar looking to GC 1-2. The pockets were cut at a wide angle so if you hit pocket facing, the ball would go back & forth like a pinball machine and spit it out or hang. The word was that Beenie had them made special
at Gandy. Any info?
thanks
ps
The best players in the country played all games on them for over 10 years.
One mintute you're interested in a Diamond, the next you want an old Gandy?
Hi RKC. Don't know how old you are, but did you ever come to
Weenie Beenie's room in arlington va in the 70's? The tables were gandy but they had
what looked like laminated rails similar looking to GC 1-2. The pockets were cut at a wide angle so if you hit pocket facing, the ball would go back & forth like a pinball machine and spit it out or hang. The word was that Beenie had them made special
at Gandy. Any info?
thanks
ps
The best players in the country played all games on them for over 10 years.
I’ve had Big G tables (two) for the past 35 years. They are great tables and an excellent value. The pros played major tournaments on them throughout the late 80 and early to mid 90’s. I have Olhausen cushions and Simonis cloth. My table is as true today as the day I purchased it thirty years ago and it does not vibrate when bumped as one person said. It sits on my concrete basement floor. At the end of the day, you’re looking at a structure, slate, and a ball return system. Everything else (cushions, felt) are replaced anyway on an older table. The slate is fine, the structure is fine and the ball return rails work fine. GC’s are great tables but both new and used ones are expensive these days. Even if the GC was built better; you are putting it in your house, not a pool room where it will get abused.Or is it just that the GCs are that much better?
I grew up in GA in the late '60s and Big Gs were pretty much the standard table in this area. And I later had 2 different ones in my homes over the years. Heck, we all thought they were great but maybe we just didn't know any better.
Anyway, I'll be looking for a 9 foot table soon for our retirement home now under construction and naturally I thought I'd just find an older Big G and have a good mechanic set it up right. That is, until I started reading this forum!
I'm of course aware of the Gold Crowns, but I would have thought that the real slate on the Gandys would easily trump the Brunstone on the GCs. That doesn't seem to bother anyone though, so maybe I need to think again.
Opinions with first-hand knowledge would sure be appreciated.
Gandys also only have 2 rails bolts vs 3 on a GC.Not even close to GC.
GC's had the Monarch and Super Speed cushions .
Better than any of the K66 on G's.
The frames of G's are not nowhere near GC's frames.
Big G's vibrated too much. You bump a Gandy, you see a table shake.
You bump a GC, nothing happens.
The slates on the GC I and II were pinned.
Gandy's, doubt it.
They were also infamous for warped frames and rails here.
Like everything else, the answers are all subjective. In my experience the Gandy Big G tables weren't horrible, they were a solid C- to C table...but the Gold Crowns are in the solid B+ to A- range...with the Diamond tables being A++ and in a class all by themselves.
Prior to Diamond, there was the Robertson Black Max. IMHO it smoked GCs all day long. This boom time Pool Hall on Bainbridge Ave in the Bronx had them, they were flipping amamzing. I've heard other people give them similar reviews. The Robertson Pool Table manufacturing (of Tampa, FL) factory burnt to the ground a bunch a years ago and the owners elected not to rebuild...I think they just do standard billiard supplies now. Anyways, if you get the chance to play on one, by all means do so. They're the only table that I've ever found that come anywhere close to a Diamond.
With all this being said, I'm of the belief and experience that the table mechanic that installs the table factors heavily into how the table performs, regardless of the brand. -Z-
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I thought they were good tables when maintained properly. The had them in an old pool hall I frequented.Or is it just that the GCs are that much better?
I grew up in GA in the late '60s and Big Gs were pretty much the standard table in this area. And I later had 2 different ones in my homes over the years. Heck, we all thought they were great but maybe we just didn't know any better.
Anyway, I'll be looking for a 9 foot table soon for our retirement home now under construction and naturally I thought I'd just find an older Big G and have a good mechanic set it up right. That is, until I started reading this forum!
I'm of course aware of the Gold Crowns, but I would have thought that the real slate on the Gandys would easily trump the Brunstone on the GCs. That doesn't seem to bother anyone though, so maybe I need to think again.
Opinions with first-hand knowledge would sure be appreciated.
Being "good enough" for Beanie's doesn't mean that they were good. I played at J&J plenty of times BITD, and it was the nonstop action that was the attraction, not those godawful Gandy tables. The best tables in the DC area at the time were the first three GCs at Randolph Hills and the front table at Brunswick Billiards, which was a 5' x 10' Brunswick from the 1920's with undersized pockets that left many a road player leaving emptyhanded.Well, Gandy Big Gs may not have been held in the high regard that Gold Crown and Diamond are, but they were good enough to play on in Bill (Weenie Beanie) Staton's Jack and Jill pool room in Arlington Virginia until 1980 when it closed. Some great action and tournaments there. You might recognize a few, including Mizerak, Margo, and the Dove Cue.
All the best,
WW
Big G tables were very solid and played good.Or is it just that the GCs are that much better?
I grew up in GA in the late '60s and Big Gs were pretty much the standard table in this area. And I later had 2 different ones in my homes over the years. Heck, we all thought they were great but maybe we just didn't know any better.
Anyway, I'll be looking for a 9 foot table soon for our retirement home now under construction and naturally I thought I'd just find an older Big G and have a good mechanic set it up right. That is, until I started reading this forum!
I'm of course aware of the Gold Crowns, but I would have thought that the real slate on the Gandys would easily trump the Brunstone on the GCs. That doesn't seem to bother anyone though, so maybe I need to think again.
Opinions with first-hand knowledge would sure be appreciated.
the ones i play on have big pockets but will rattle a ball out real easy.
many times ive seen a ball hit the faces and do a dance across the shelf and not drop. ive even hit a hanging ball and had it just walk up and down the shelf inside the pocket and not fall.
its a great table for 14.1 i love it.
No slicks all have Brunswicks, I'm playing out of bogiesHaha are you playing in a Slick Willie's in Texas? Quite a few of their spots had those at one time.
Much nicer place.No slicks all have Brunswicks, I'm playing out of bogies