All I Can Say is HOLY BUCKETS!!!!!!

Hey, sf, is there something I'm missing out on here?
And, if there is, do I really want to know about it? :)

Trampster:

Yup, you are missing out on something. "Nancewayne" is not female (the latter syllable is his first name, in fact). That is, unless, you knew that, and were doing the old folks' home, "who are you again?" loss-of-memory-by-the-minute skit or something, in which case *I* am the one with egg on my face...

:D

-Sean
 
Trampster:

Yup, you are missing out on something. "Nancewayne" is not female (the latter syllable is his first name, in fact). That is, unless, you knew that, and were doing the old folks' home, "who are you again?" loss-of-memory-by-the-minute skit or something, in which case *I* am the one with egg on my face...

:D

-Sean


Nope. It is all my fault. I either jumped to a hasty conclusion, or else I was deliberately deceived by a fraud and an imposter. I'll have the Steamer Cue Sports Ltd. legal team look into this matter immediately. The nerve of some people. :eek:
 
...and yet it's only TEN TIMES as much as the regular Delta rack! :eek: I especially like the part about the "gold" wearing off with "improper use"! I'm guessing that means that the balls should never touch the rack! LOL

Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com

00012" of glod plate is like waving the chicken over the pot and calling it chicken soup. Johnnyt
 
lol, are they saying that we shouldn't use it for racking? :grin-square:
"The gold is .00012” thick and can easily scratch and wear off"
 
I agree with this one. .00012" of gold plating (or whatever the number was) is so insignificant an amount, I bet it would chip off fairly easily.

Someone should take the actual dimensions of the rack, and find the total surface area of it. Then using the .00012” measurement, find out how much gold is actually on that thing. I bet it's not worth $995.

An inexact (but close) calculation shows that it would take approximately 0.18 ounces of gold to cover my Diamond rack to a thickess of .00012". At $1,200 per ounce, that's $216 worth of gold (unless I screwed up).
 
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