Anybody tried pine tar?

whitewolf

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Do you have a cue that keeps coming loose at the joint during play?

At Sports Authority I bought a stick of pine tar in a tube for less than $10. It is used for baseball bats in case you want to get some for yourself.

It works great. Just thought I would share this with you.
 
Do you have a cue that keeps coming loose at the joint during play?

At Sports Authority I bought a stick of pine tar in a tube for less than $10. It is used for baseball bats in case you want to get some for yourself.

It works great. Just thought I would share this with you.

Careful with that stuff. Apply too much, or if it gets down into the threads of the pin, and you'll need two of these -- one in each hand -- to get the cue apart!

http://gripperbybauer.com/viewItem.php?id=2

grabber_lg.jpg

Good idea though, if used precisely and sparingly,
-Sean
 
I have no clue what WW does with it, but if I were going to use it, I would just put a small amount on one face of the joint, not on the pin. My radial pin joint comes loose fairly frequently during play as well. However, I usually hear it or feel it right away when that happens.
 
Loose pins

I have applied the blue stick wax, as used on the slate joints of pool tables to the pin. It does tighten up the joint for a while. I haven't heard of anyone else doing it, so check it out with someone first. A lot safer than tar, though, I think.
 
I realize this is a different topic but if your radial pin 'gets loose' then it it was constructed improperly in the first place. The whole point of a radial screw is thread engagement. With a properly created male and female , the screw is never loose even when not fully tightened.

IMO. ;)
 
I realize this is a different topic but if your radial pin 'gets loose' then it it was constructed improperly in the first place. The whole point of a radial screw is thread engagement. With a properly created male and female , the screw is never loose even when not fully tightened.

IMO. ;)

Good post I couldn't agree more...I play with a radial pin cue made by a great cue maker and have zero issues with it.
 
A loose joint pin to shaft like you are describing is an easier fix than playing with pine tar. This will almost guarantee a larger headache for you in the longer run Buddy.

Please describe what you are experiencing and someone can give you a hand. Maybe and most liley something you can do yourself.

Like for instance, I have seen where the pin is bottoming out in the shaft and you can drill and tap a little longer.

Loose fit, run a bit of CA glue in the shaft and swirl it around and pour the excess out.

This can tighten the fit.
 
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I have no clue what WW does with it, but if I were going to use it, I would just put a small amount on one face of the joint, not on the pin. My radial pin joint comes loose fairly frequently during play as well. However, I usually hear it or feel it right away when that happens.

Exactly. It is hard to put too much on the face of the joint since you would have to have a butter knife and a tendency for overdoing things.
 
I realize this is a different topic but if your radial pin 'gets loose' then it it was constructed improperly in the first place. The whole point of a radial screw is thread engagement. With a properly created male and female , the screw is never loose even when not fully tightened.

IMO. ;)

True, but not all of us have quality pool cues. My Scruggs and Capone cues never come loose.

It's my playing cue (Sceptre) that gets loose. Now it is perfect.
 
I have seen several uniloc joints come loose when playing. I have never seen any others come loose.

Kim
 
If a threaded connection relies on interference in the threads, it is a horrible design.

No opinion here, it is a fundamental of engineering. You know, engineering--that profession that analyzes mistakes from the past, learns from successes and uses sound practices to design good products.

dld

Radial is not based on interference.
 
If the screw is tight without the face being tight, there is interference somewhere.

dld

I suppose you can play the semantical game on this like anything else...

So much fun.

Anyway....

There's a difference between 'Tight' , properly fitting and "loose".

And good engineer would understand that too. :)
 
If you truly don't understand the theory behind a radial interface , then I do apologize for being a smarta$$.

Honestly.
 
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