2 Whys

Cheap price for knowledge of how it was made. Slice it down the middle on a bandsaw and you have a blueprint.

Somebody has a cue of the same model that needs a repair, and the cue could be salvaged for parts. Many times, the butt cap on a cue is damaged, and getting an original cap with any engraving would be worth the cost.

I am not sure what a "Palm protoype" is, but if that was a real original Palmer, I would consider bidding at that price.

Kelly
 
Kelly_Guy said:
Cheap price for knowledge of how it was made. Slice it down the middle on a bandsaw and you have a blueprint.

Somebody has a cue of the same model that needs a repair, and the cue could be salvaged for parts. Many times, the butt cap on a cue is damaged, and getting an original cap with any engraving would be worth the cost.

I am not sure what a "Palm protoype" is, but if that was a real original Palmer, I would consider bidding at that price.

Kelly


I agree, some parts can still be salvaged. you just need somebody to fix it up for you. just cut the broken area and transform it into a joint area. that would become a 2 jointed cue. besides, all you just need to buy is a shaft. saves you a lot of $$$ !
 
Not a collectible

Hail Mary Shot said:
I agree, some parts can still be salvaged. you just need somebody to fix it up for you. just cut the broken area and transform it into a joint area. that would become a 2 jointed cue. besides, all you just need to buy is a shaft. saves you a lot of $$$ !
:D It's not broken in the right place to make another joint. ;) I really don't think fixing and buying another shaft is going to save much!:rolleyes: :) I am sure it would cost a lot more than just buying a new one.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...MESO:IT&viewitem=&item=330113116406&rd=1&rd=1
 
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