anyone? really interested
poolplayer2093 said:anyone? really interested
poolplayer2093 said:anyone? really interested
poolplayer2093 said:Thanks fellas. i was really just wondering how it played but apparently everyone on here things that the wood plays well enough
Use Bondo to fill up the grains next time.Varney Cues said:It actually has nice tone & makes a fine hit. But like everyone says...finishing it is brutal. Like trying to clear a sponge. It really doesn't have any great eye appeal...and there are many woods that hit as well but look better. So that combined with finishing issues make it one of my least favorite. I used my last bit on Smokey's cue...and never ordered anymore to replace my stock. I'd rather use some nice dark rosewood if I was looking for a similar color. Hope this helps Sam. :smile:
Varney Cues said:It actually has nice tone & makes a fine hit. But like everyone says...finishing it is brutal. Like trying to clear a sponge. It really doesn't have any great eye appeal...and there are many woods that hit as well but look better. So that combined with finishing issues make it one of my least favorite. I used my last bit on Smokey's cue...and never ordered anymore to replace my stock. I'd rather use some nice dark rosewood if I was looking for a similar color. Hope this helps Sam. :smile:
JoeyInCali said:Use Bondo to fill up the grains next time.
Then cover it up with wenge colored Sharpie.
When I was apprenticing with Zeiler, he had a house cue with wenge bottom.
I saw all that porcupine crap splinter fly all over when he was turning it.
That was the end of that.
Ugly dust, ugly everything.
Brent can have all the wenge he wants.
Ugh!
JoeyInCali said:Use Bondo to fill up the grains next time.
Then cover it up with wenge colored Sharpie.
When I was apprenticing with Zeiler, he had a house cue with wenge bottom.
I saw all that porcupine crap splinter fly all over when he was turning it.
That was the end of that.
Ugly dust, ugly everything.
Brent can have all the wenge he wants.
Ugh!
Varney Cues said:It actually has nice tone & makes a fine hit. But like everyone says...finishing it is brutal. Like trying to clear a sponge. It really doesn't have any great eye appeal...and there are many woods that hit as well but look better. So that combined with finishing issues make it one of my least favorite. I used my last bit on Smokey's cue...and never ordered anymore to replace my stock. I'd rather use some nice dark rosewood if I was looking for a similar color. Hope this helps Sam. :smile:
BHQ said:bryan's right about being a pain in the ass to finish
took me awhile to figure out how to do that , still a pain, one more step in the process,
but not quite as big a pain it was the first fewtimes i sprayed clear on wenge
i like the hit of it
ask some of those guys i showed you cues i made for them
several are familiar names on az
weeseng, blowfish, kvinbrwr, the king, williet
BHQ said:i have a time or two![]()
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If you use live tooling it cuts just like another wood.JoeyInCali said:Use Bondo to fill up the grains next time.
Then cover it up with wenge colored Sharpie.
When I was apprenticing with Zeiler, he had a house cue with wenge bottom.
I saw all that porcupine crap splinter fly all over when he was turning it.
That was the end of that.
Ugly dust, ugly everything.
Brent can have all the wenge he wants.
Ugh!
hi craig, the natural linen looks GOOD with the wenge :smile:Craig Fales said:If you use live tooling it cuts just like another wood.
Thanks, I took the pic in the sunlight, it's the only way I can get the gorgeous grain of wenge to show up. Out of yours I like the first and last one listed a lot.BHQ said:hi craig, the natural linen looks GOOD with the wenge :smile:
i want to duplicate the first one, john k's cueCraig Fales said:Thanks, I took the pic in the sunlight, it's the only way I can get the gorgeous grain of wenge to show up. Out of yours I like the first and last one listed a lot.
poolplayer2093 said:anyone? really interested