Don't use wax on them. It makes the balls play inconsistently as the wax wears off. The will throw less and bank longer. Draw will be greatly affected, as Jasmin mentions. It's fun and it's pretty, but it's not standard conditions.
I use Aramith cleaner. I rinse and dry the balls after rubbing the cleaner off to make sure there is no residue.
I’m getting ready to get new cloth for my table, so I figured it would be a good time clean my Centennial balls. They are about 12 years old and looked pretty crummy. I generally wipe them down every week and take them to local pool halls to get cleaned in their machines. Over time they appeared...
I followed Pappy Mike's YouTube instructions to clean pool balls with clothes detergent and the green side of a 3-M Scotchbright sponge. I polished them with a cloth towel but they are dull looking. Most comments to Pappy's YouTube website, I now found, condemn Pappy's method. How do I get...
Don't use wax on them. It makes the balls play inconsistently as the wax wears off. The will throw less and bank longer. Draw will be greatly affected, as Jasmin mentions. It's fun and it's pretty, but it's not standard conditions.
I thought the results of Dan White's experiment detailed on the the ball cleaning resource page were interesting. He found that balls cleaned with Aramith Ball Cleaner consistently had the same throw over 20 shots, while balls cleaned with another cleaner had inconsistent throw to begin with, then the throw increased markedly after roughly 10 shots.
So it seems that we should not be looking for a ball cleaner that makes the balls the shiniest, rather we should be looking for a ball cleaner that makes the balls throw consistently. Does your favorite ball cleaner result in consistent throw?
Aramith or Diamond cleaner wax in the bucket style buffer then in to the diamond ball polisher with no cleaner, sometimes a little water. No wax in the diamond polisher to keep it clean and no residue. Most the time I just use water.