w0409@aol.com
Registered
Thank You Bavaongoul, I have a set coming!
Sent from my iPad using AzBilliards Forums
Sent from my iPad using AzBilliards Forums
The guy that used to sell a set on Ebay is no longer listing them. They were the only one's i'd seen. Apparently there is little to no demand for these or someone would sell them. Probably costs more to tool up,market and ship than you could make. Contact B. Jewett. He knows a lot about this stuff.Anyone seen any gauge sets available for sale recently? Can't find any on eBay and would like to get a set. Any ideas?
Bring your own, fairly new, set of balls to play with.But what do you do when all of the balls drop through the smallest hole?
Damn, I really fancied a set tooThe guy that used to sell a set on Ebay is no longer listing them. They were the only one's i'd seen.
If the guy on Ebay is no longer selling them you could try to contact him.The guy that used to sell a set on Ebay is no longer listing them. They were the only one's i'd seen. Apparently there is little to no demand for these or someone would sell them. Probably costs more to tool up,market and ship than you could make. Contact B. Jewett. He knows a lot about this stuff.
I have no contact info for the guy.If the guy on Ebay is no longer selling them you could try to contact him.
The way I got my first three ball size gauges is by knowing someone. The first was in about 1975 from the maintenance supervisor at the Student Union who dealt with machinists who could bore (or cut?) two holes in a steel plate. The second two were from a friend who had a precision wire EDM machine. Unless you find a machinist pool player friend, I'm guessing a go/no-go pair of holes will cost $100 or so.
What EDM can do:
The ones made of fiberglass that were mentioned recently seem to be pretty good. I tested the one (actually a set of four) that I got and the holes appeared to be round and the correct sizes.... The go no-go gauges unless they are made to high accuracy and inspected, I doubt will be any good at all. Especially if they are selling for a few bucks.
I've looked a little and can't find my order info. I also note that there are at least two different ones that have been sold on Ebay. One is three holes in single piece of green plastic. The other is four (or five?) holes in separate sections of a fan-like stack.I have no contact info for the guy.
Judging by the number of balls that went thru the holes and the ones that didn’t, I’d say that plastic gage was spot on.The ones made of fiberglass that were mentioned recently seem to be pretty good. I tested the one (actually a set of four) that I got and the holes appeared to be round and the correct sizes.
The way I got my first three ball size gauges is by knowing someone. The first was in about 1975 from the maintenance supervisor at the Student Union who dealt with machinists who could bore (or cut?) two holes in a steel plate. The second two were from a friend who had a precision wire EDM machine. Unless you find a machinist pool player friend, I'm guessing a go/no-go pair of holes will cost $100 or so.
Yes I did consider a micrometer, Great for the measurement. But thinking the gauge may be good for also testing for roundness, which the micrometer could not?I recommend a 2-3” micrometer. You can get a used top name brand such as starrett, mitutoyo, or brown and sharp, for like $30 on eBay. No one wants them anymore. The mechanical ones, not the digital.
Or, you can get a new Chinese digital one for about $50.
You want micrometers. Not calipers. They look like the letter C.
That will be the most accurate way to measure a ball that can be done without specialized equipment.
The go no-go gauges unless they are made to high accuracy and inspected, I doubt will be any good at all. Especially if they are selling for a few bucks.
This is the person I got the fiberglass(?) set from, you can try the "contact" link I guess:Hopefully someone can remember the eBay seller?
And sell a plate of them with 3 holes and text etching for $12? He must be making them another way. Or maybe that’s why he stopped making them.Agreed. With some aluminum plate (or maybe my favorite, old (or new) Teflon cutting board) it would only take about 20 minutes to hole-saw then bore accurate (+/- 0.001") each hole.
Dave
I would purchase a set.View attachment 625425
These parts are laser cut. I can try out pool ball sizes and see how they work. If successful, and there is interest, I can have a few sets made.
Customer here....also snooker balls?View attachment 625425
These parts are laser cut. I can try out pool ball sizes and see how they work. If successful, and there is interest, I can have a few sets made.