This is a combined thank you for TATE's great shaft cleaning thread, "Step by Step, with photos, easy and safe shaft cleaning" and a few comments about my positive experience with using Parchment Paper as a shaft's final finishing step.
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=188985
I put it on our shopping list for our local grocery chain, and I'm guessin' it probably ran c. 5 bucks.
It either tears easily or cuts easily. It's a rugged paper, but it's also very thin, and it clearly has been treated with something akin to Teflon or silicone. To use the proper chemical designation; slippery stuff.
I cut a hand sized square and just rubbed the shaft from the ferrule to the joint. I found while pulling the paper with one hand while pushing the shaft with the other, that it quickly generated a significant amount of heat via the friction of two very smooth surfaces.
It quickly added a high sheen to the wood and I was particularly pleased at how it managed to shine up the ferrule.
If you've already found the method that works the best for you, this will most likely not change your routine. I just thought for a few bucks, that I'd try it and I was most pleased. I purposely tested it on a somewhat soiled shaft and found it had no cleansing properties at all. It did, however, make a nicely slick shaft, and was very convenient, easy and quick to use.
That's it. I like experimenting with new ideas and just thought I'd run it by you. For 5 bucks it did a great job, and I can imagine after a thorough cleaning beforehand, it might bring back an almost new look to your cue.
If you don't care for it, your wife can use it for baking you some cookies...

http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=188985
I put it on our shopping list for our local grocery chain, and I'm guessin' it probably ran c. 5 bucks.
It either tears easily or cuts easily. It's a rugged paper, but it's also very thin, and it clearly has been treated with something akin to Teflon or silicone. To use the proper chemical designation; slippery stuff.
I cut a hand sized square and just rubbed the shaft from the ferrule to the joint. I found while pulling the paper with one hand while pushing the shaft with the other, that it quickly generated a significant amount of heat via the friction of two very smooth surfaces.
It quickly added a high sheen to the wood and I was particularly pleased at how it managed to shine up the ferrule.
If you've already found the method that works the best for you, this will most likely not change your routine. I just thought for a few bucks, that I'd try it and I was most pleased. I purposely tested it on a somewhat soiled shaft and found it had no cleansing properties at all. It did, however, make a nicely slick shaft, and was very convenient, easy and quick to use.
That's it. I like experimenting with new ideas and just thought I'd run it by you. For 5 bucks it did a great job, and I can imagine after a thorough cleaning beforehand, it might bring back an almost new look to your cue.
If you don't care for it, your wife can use it for baking you some cookies...
