Tell um Ray..... CNC sucks! lol
damn, the OP is really going to shat himself when I become the first to break the million dollar mark
No kidding.
I need sarcasm fonts.
I was just kidding.
I draw on Autodesk Inventor to get my jigs made . From Inventor, my drawings are imported to a CAM software. Editing is done on that, then the g- codes are created for the cnc.
I just had jigs made and it took 6-hours for the cnc shop to work on my jigs.
That after I spent days in drawing them.
:lol: That button never seems magic when I'm the guy hitting it.With CNC, you can whip out the cue in minutes.
You just hit the magic button.
IMO I think its funny that nobody asks , how does it play, what's the hit like ? Inlays are decoration , some instances less than a 1/16 deep . Doesn't make the cue stronger , nor do you feel the hit better , mostly just makes the cue cost more . I'm old school . IMO making a cue that plays solid with lotza feel is the art . Looks don't make the balls go in , it's more of a mine cost more than yours deal , more dollars than sense ... I have done inlay using pantograph and cnc , a lot of work FOR SURE . Go ask a machine shop what their machine time costs , high $$$$$$$$$ . IMO I like old school and I like to let the wood do the talking , good wood makes a good cue , not inlays ...It is a hell of a cue , I think I'd rather blow it on some land ...
damn, the OP is really going to shat himself when I become the first to break the million dollar mark
What are you drawing? All you do is glue three pieces of wood together . :grin:
IMO I think its funny that nobody asks , how does it play, what's the hit like ? Inlays are decoration , some instances less than a 1/16 deep . Doesn't make the cue stronger , nor do you feel the hit better , mostly just makes the cue cost more . I'm old school . IMO making a cue that plays solid with lotza feel is the art . Looks don't make the balls go in , it's more of a mine cost more than yours deal , more dollars than sense ... I have done inlay using pantograph and cnc , a lot of work FOR SURE . Go ask a machine shop what their machine time costs , high $$$$$$$$$ . IMO I like old school and I like to let the wood do the talking , good wood makes a good cue , not inlays ...It is a hell of a cue , I think I'd rather blow it on some land ...
Hey forget MasterZ. U can get this one of a kind cue from Budget Cues for only $45K. That's a $5K savings over the original Pechauer direct price. And that's a neat trick of having such a one of a kind cue available for sale from 2 different dealers.
What does CNC have to do with the price???
why are the words in the description all mashed together . You think by asking 75 grand you could atleast post a legible description,