smiling_Hans
Well-known member
I know what you meant.My answer was Prewitt is the best.
I know what you meant.My answer was Prewitt is the best.
I was playing scotch doubles on the Western BCA stream earlier this year and Ra Hannah was commentating. Ra is big into youth pool as am I so I like to support him by donating a cue every so often to raffle off. This was the first time I was on his stream and he was giving my cues their due when he had the chance. I was shooting an 8 ball when Ra commented:Some of these cue makers don’t even play with their own cues.
A friend of mine called a famous cue maker and they were chatting it up. Pretty long conversation about cue making and other things about a possible build. Finally he asks “what do you play with and your specs.” The cue maker said Manzino. Well my buddy went with the manzino. His reasoning is if a cue maker plays with another then it’s a damn good cue.
Another maker I know of plays with Davis blanks even though his own is highly regarded. Even post it on their socials.
I guess it’s hard to make what yourself something. Like cooking a steak we can all do it but The chef wants to eat out too.
Also you’re a contribution in growing the game.I was playing scotch doubles on the Western BCA stream earlier this year and Ra Hannah was commentating. Ra is big into youth pool as am I so I like to support him by donating a cue every so often to raffle off. This was the first time I was on his stream and he was giving my cues their due when he had the chance. I was shooting an 8 ball when Ra commented:
Watching the playback I was kind of embarrassed as I was using a Denali cue Bob Flynn made as I had in my possession zero of my own cues that were complete.
Here is Guido Orlandi's joint... as the energy from the hit, gets to the joint.... a flat faced joint rebounds some of the energy back to the tip. On the Conical joint, the energy is diverted out to the outside, from the angle of the machined surface.I'll try it
Barry built cues like Gus, they aren’t perfect in terms of tolerance’s of modern cnc guys, but those Szams sure are the nuts on nap cloth. They were at their time the best or among the best cues ever built in the 70’s-80’s.John Showman IMHO makes the best playing cue and the best old school inlay cue - there is NO second place, then there is Dennis and Tascarella(never played a tasc, I'd like to) then there is Barry- new godfather to old school but needs to tighten up inlays(great guy though)
1 Showman
2 Searing
3/4Tascarella & Barry(tie...maybe)
Yes it is subjective. Who builds the best playing cue with no cnc inlay work? Examples would be Eric of Sugar Tree, Joey of Bautista and Tony of Guerra. Cues with 1000 inlays really are not meant to play with. Shooter08
I have tried calling Guido Orlandi, but Verizon says the phone number is out of service. Does anyone know how to get in touch with him??????I'll say it again... Guido Orlandi in Michigan, makes some of the Best Playing cues on Planet Earth. His Conical Joint makes a 2-piece Cue, feel like a 1-piece Cue & his finish is flawless. I sold all of my fancy cues, to play with the MAGIC WAND he made me.,..
Here is Guido Orlandi's joint... as the energy from the hit, gets to the joint.... a flat faced joint rebounds some of the energy back to the tip. On the Conical joint, the energy is diverted out to the outside, from the angle of the machined surface.
The cone joint has been used in Industry for the last two hundred years, since the industrial revolution. The cone joint gives the two piece structure two things not offered in other joining concepts. The 1st feature is this, the concentricity is perfect, the second is this; the centerline of both components are aligned perfectly.
The Proper use of Guido's Joint is to locate on the Cone, just as you say. There should be a space between the end of the shaft & the surface of the Butt... As far as rebound, lets just say that we will agree to disagree... The feel is different & most folks agree to that statement. It's a great Cue.I keep asking this question...
The conical joint used in industry only locates on the cone. If you add the flat flange on the joint, you are over-constraining the joint. This means that the two pieces either seat on the cone and leave a gap at the flat outer flange, or the two pieces seat on the flat flange and leave a gap in the conical section. This is true unless there is a compliant material in the assembly.
A conical connection is also going to rebound some of the energy, maybe even more than a flat face. This is easily proven through ultrasonic imaging of materials and fetuses. I.e. you don't only get an image of the flat parts of your unborn daughter.
None of this is to say that the joint is bad, just that I don't believe that what you and mr. orlandi think is happening is actually happening.
The Proper use of Guido's Joint is to locate on the Cone, just as you say. There should be a space between the end of the shaft & the surface of the Butt... As far as rebound, lets just say that we will agree to disagree... The feel is different & most folks agree to that statement. It's a great Cue.
You are more than welcome to think what you will...
I was a Tool Engineer for BOEING AIRPLANE COMPNAY for 30 plus years. One of the axioms we always adhered to was this, "you cant locate on two points or surfaces, at the same time, especial criss-crossing points. While we can define that point on a Cad Cam Computer, getting it to be there in metal, every time, is difficult, so we just didn't do that. Neither did Layani Cue, they too had a space... OVER & OUTThank you for the reply.
I'm not disagreeing with you on the wave transmission, it is easily proven with science, I already told you an example. If you want to agree to disagree, it isn't with me that you are disagreeing.
I toyed with a conical joint long before ever hearing of one, somewhere around 1996. I didn't want any gap at the joint.
I was a Tool Engineer for BOEING AIRPLANE COMPNAY for 30 plus years. One of the axioms we always adhered to was this, "you cant locate on two points or surfaces, at the same time, especial criss-crossing points. While we can define that point on a Cad Cam Computer, getting it to be there in metal, every time, is difficult, so we just didn't do that. Neither did Layani Cue, they too had a space... OVER & OUT
TBF working for Boeing isn't really a shining endorsement of engineering prowess these daysI was a Tool Engineer for BOEING AIRPLANE COMPNAY for 30 plus years. One of the axioms we always adhered to was this, "you cant locate on two points or surfaces, at the same time, especial criss-crossing points. While we can define that point on a Cad Cam Computer, getting it to be there in metal, every time, is difficult, so we just didn't do that. Neither did Layani Cue, they too had a space... OVER & OUT
I retired from BOEING in 1998... I am now 82 years old.TBF working for Boeing isn't really a shining endorsement of engineering prowess these days![]()
Wasn’t a personal jibe, more a bit of light humour. No disrespect intended bud.I retired from BOEING in 1998... I am now 82 years old.