6 point Purpleheart into maple - our first cue posted here

Otterman

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
So, early this year, my son picked up a couple older McDermott's in need of refinishing. I've had a cue lathe from MidAmerica in our garage for a number of years that had only been used for tips and light shaft work, so he had the idea of tackling the refinish job himself. I admit to some early skepticism, but after some trial and error (quite a bit of trial and a lot of error :wink:), and some gracious advice from Eric Crisp, he produced some pretty nice refinish jobs on those McD's. Next up he asked if I'd help him match a shaft to the fresh D-26, so we measured the rings, found some matching dowels from Prather Cue Parts and gave that a go. The shaft turned out pretty much indistinguishable from the original, which I frankly found a pleasant surprise. Then he cut up an old beat-up Dufferin and pretty soon we had ourselves a sneaky conversion cue. A few conversion cues later, we invested in a tapering machine from MidAmerica and graduated to assembling a full cue from some nice blanks from Prather and our own decorative rings. Following is our most recent completed cue. 6 high/low purpleheart points into straight grain maple, 4 veneers in long points of natural, red, green and magenta, rings of natural veneers into purpleheart, surrounded by copper and black fiber, white Juma joint and butt cap, 3/8-10 modified pin, antique white with brown spec Irish linen wrap, 60" cue (30" butt with two 30" shafts), both shafts with 3/8" Tomahawk ferrules and UltraSkin medium tips. 15.1 oz. butt, (1) -3.8 oz. shaft with 13mm tip, (1) - 4.1 oz. shaft with 12.85 mm tip. Hope everyone likes it. :D

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Thank you! Here's a few more pics. Hopefully a little clearer than the first ones.

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Looks great. Hope it was a good experience for you both.

Thanks, and it has been a good experience. Certainly less challenging than teaching him to play pool when he was a little younger. Kids can be stubborn! Turned out well, though. He qualified for the Junior Nationals 6 times, won the Oklahoma 18-under 4 times, Missouri 18-under once and runner-up one more time, and has been holding his own with pros at the Texas Open since he was 15. Spending more time on college and making cues now than playing, but hopefully we both can get back to that in the near future.
 
I've always had great respect for cuemakers and have owned many nice cues over the years, but I've certainly gained a whole new level of appreciation over the last several months. Although we've come a long way in a short period of time, the learning curve is extraordinarily steep. Getting a cue right from design, basic construction, joint pin accuracy, wrap groove depth, finish, and then have it play well is one of the most difficult tasks I've ever done, but also one of the most rewarding.

Can't count the number of times I've Googled questions about all of the above, plus lathes, tooling, CNC, etc, etc., all prefaced with "Ask the Cuemaker". That forum has a ridiculous amount of information and guidance. :thumbup: Many thanks to all the cuemakers that share their knowledge there.
 
I''ll go ahead and tell you the truth since no one else has put it in these terms.

That is a HELL of an effort for not being very far into your venture,not only with the execution,but something other than a 4 point with Titlist colors,quite strong (y). Tommy D.
 
Congrats, looks great 👍
I''ll go ahead and tell you the truth since no one else has put it in these terms.

That is a HELL of an effort for not being very far into your venture,not only with the execution,but something other than a 4 point with Titlist colors,quite strong (y). Tommy D.
Thanks, guys! Really appreciate the compliments. The first couple cues we made that weren't conversions were indeed 4-pointers with classic veneer colors. We've made a couple cues that are more flashy than this purpleheart cue, but this one is probably our cleanest as far as execution. You just get a little better on each cue. Have a couple in the works that we think will turn out really nice. Here's a couple others we made recently.
 

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