Pool Chalk……Constantly Evolving……..What’s the Future?

Bavafongoul

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
When I first walked in a pool room in 1961, I was in total awe of the number of pool tables and so many pool cues on
the wall racks. It was a new experience having only played in the basement or gymnasium of the local school’s
summertime activities programs. When I picked up my first rack of pool balls from the counter man, he tossed in a few pieces of chalk that I paid little attention to.

Down through the years, my interest in pool exploded and I became addicted just like so many other readers. My initial
fascination was focused on pool cue designs that eventually lead to my interest in pool cue construction. Along the way, I stumbled up different brands of pool chalk but never really settled on one brand. As long as a cube of chalk still had a good shape, that was fine with me.

Then about a dozen, maybe more, years ago, more elite brands of chalk started appearing boasting of being able to chalk on Sunday and play until Tuesday without having to reapply chalk again to your cue tip. And of course, cleanliness which became a very important criteria for me so I have ivory ferrules on all my cues to avoid any chalk staining. Cue shafts also get dirty from chalk so that was another reason to use chalk that didn’t create a mess, as well as minimizing chalk buildup in the table cloth. Ever use a rainbow vacuum on a pool table? The effluent can start looking like a river of blue mud. So chalk brand gradually became more important over time to many players.

I became a fan of Blue Diamond Chalk and used it for years. Still have a dozen brand new boxes. Another brand was Magic Chalk that I tried as well. It seemed like new chalk brands were popping up all the time and then it settled down and Dr. Dave did a great review on different pool chalk brands. I saw a F/S thread for a large quantity of MC and so I wondered how important is pool chalk nowadays with pool players? I was pretty indifferent about which designer (pricey) chalk was the best and resisted paying crazy prices until TAOM.

It seems to me TAOM has become hugely popular and price isn’t important. I have been playing with the same piece of TAOM for over a year and bought a box of Pagulayan chalk because I prefer the cube shape to oval. The Pagulayan chalk is fantastic and so it dawned on me that the 3 pieces of TAOM chalk (oval & cube) will probably last several years. The chalk is absolutely the cleanest chalk I’ve ever seen.

So I wondered how chalk sales are going for pool supply stores? Do players still have brand allegiance for pool chalks? I just bought a piece of TAOM V10 on Walmart’s website for $4.19 (shipped with taxes incld was only $10.57). The same chalk on Pool Dawg is $19.99 plus tax and shipping. Walmart was less than 1/2 the price. .I was going to order a larger quantity but I realized I’d likely never really need the chalk since it lasts so long. TAOM seems to atop the totem pole for the best pool chalk. If you want to try it, check out Walmart’s website pricing. One cube of TAOM V10 for under $11 is a fantastic price.
 

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Someone left a 95% used up block of Taom at the bar about 6 months ago. I've been using it on my home table, and it is very clean, which I appreciate. Otherwise, it's Masters for me, made in the USA and also cheaper than dirt.
 
4.99 shipping for each piece you buy. I added 5 pieces and shipping was $25 so still 50% of normal retail but yeah…
 
I just think that for about $11 if you haven’t tried TAOM, this may be your best economic opportunity to get some.
If you apply it correctly by swiping or brushing the chalk on your cue tip, it should last a year or cost <$1 per mth.
Anytime you can get a product you already like and use for 50% off, it certainly warrants your consideration, IMO.
 
Masters is the standard, although Triangle is the "sleeper" in the Tweeten family of chalk, its actually a bit better than Masters. I don't have a table, I don't care if my hands get dirty...sort of a badge of honor.

I can always "pick up" a cube of Masters along the way.....not so likely with the high-priced stuff.
 
I was watching a pro match on Billiards TV last night. I think it was 8-ball but I don’t remember where and they didn’t say what year it was from but regardless….

“Albin” was commentator. I assume that was Oushan. He mentioned like a half a dozen times how Masters causes skids. SVB was using Taom. I think his opponent was using Masters. There were a number of misses attributed to skids. SVB requested the CB be cleaned numerous racks even though the shot clock kept running. Albin really bashed Masters.
 
If you chalk every shot it really does not mater--and that is where Masters shines.
If you don't you should and return to previous statement.
If you chalk every shot, it kinda does matter because you deposit chalk on the cloth when stroking the cue ball.

And Masters does the same thing as TAOM which is to create friction but it accomplishes it releasing the chalk
you just applied to your cue tip. It doesn’t just float away and the chalk gradually builds up in your table cloth.

Now if cleanliness of the table, pool balls, and your cue shaft and ferrule are not consequential to you, it’s fine.
Better players don’t over apply chalk so they tend to do a better job at not unnecessarily creating a chalk mess.
 
How bout ball chalk?
Before the break you put a tip sized spot of chalk on the cue ball
and position it at the tips point of impact.
After the break the Ref (if its a tournament) marks the cue ball, picks it up
and wipes it down, hands it to the shooter.

Shooter re-applies the dot and the Ref places it precisely where it was.
With the chalk spot correctly positioned.
Tips and shaft stay cleaner so cases stay cleaner.

Cuebuddy>>>just thinking.
Thinking about skids.
 
before long there will be a synthetic tip that requires no chalking. book it. it will happen.
Honestly if you take one of the Bulletproof recoil hard and chalk it with V10 you can play for half a dozen racks and it still has chalk.
 
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