Brunswick 9' Adam Pool Table

9' Adam Pool Table 2-1 Pool Billiard conversion 1926 solid walnut.
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Very limited production appraised by Brunswick $45,000 Asking $30,000
Call to discuss 805-five six nine-1444
Available to view in the showroom
26 W Mission St Suite 1 Santa Barbara, CA

Order NOW for early holiday delivery!
 
9' Adam Pool Table 2-1 Pool Billiard conversion 1926 solid walnut.View attachment 699583
Very limited production appraised by Brunswick $45,000 Asking $30,000
Call to discuss 805-five six nine-1444
Available to view in the showroom
26 W Mission St Suite 1 Santa Barbara, CA

Order NOW for early holiday delivery!
You may want to post this in the For Sale section.
 
Those were the days- solid walnut! Even by the 1950s cost and availability had limited Brunswick to veneered Walnut on the Anniversary table. Imagine a solid Walnut piece of furniture this size today- if even possible.
 
It is possible…just look at canada billiard’s products


Envoyé de mon iPhone en utilisant AzBilliards Forums
 
Those were the days- solid walnut! Even by the 1950s cost and availability had limited Brunswick to veneered Walnut on the Anniversary table. Imagine a solid Walnut piece of furniture this size today- if even possible.

Certainly it is possible.
Walnut is not even a particularly high priced lumber - though it is a lot more expensive than poplar. One problem is that the best walnut logs do go for veneer. Another factor is that it is common at the mill to steam walnut, which makes it kind of muddy looking and makes all the white sapwood dark gray. With stain on top, it all looks like uniform dark heartwood. For some work such as entry doors & jambs, the steamed sapwood will both fade after moderate direct exposure to sunlight, and it is not rot resistant, like walnut heartwood is.

So the furniture or millwork builder might have to buy more volume to build the same piece compared with say, cherry or oak etc. especially if specifying/buying "unsteamed".
For instance, to make a typical entry door, i figure on buying at least twice as much or more walnut for the same size door, compared to Oak.
In order to sort pieces to exclude sapwood, and for straight grain/ stability.
Regarding walnut, or even oak, a vertical laminated core for stiles and rails with thick veneer over (as has been done for a couple centuries in some of the best work) would arguably be a better product for the customer combined with 3-ply panels; but the lumber is not yet quite expensive enough that it would make sense for me given the significant increase in labor.

The reason Brunswick's tables going back to the 19th c were primarily veneered is stability.
Though i am sure all the rosewood faced/veneered rails on so many of their better tables before the 1960's and before formica became preferred, were for cost reasons, mostly. That wood in larger pieces has been really expensive for a very long time - back before civil war days when it was popular for bent laminated furniture that was then carved all over (Belter furniture, e.g.).

smt
 
Those were the days- solid walnut! Even by the 1950s cost and availability had limited Brunswick to veneered Walnut on the Anniversary table. Imagine a solid Walnut piece of furniture this size today- if even possible.

Pretty impressive, would look nice in some rich guy's superyacht to hold their laundry LOL
 
the brunswick ventura models are much newer and play very well, with the bigger pockets of course, and look very similar to this.
but can be found for around a 1000 dollars in great shape.
and make a nice furniture piece in a house.
 
With the convertible rails, if complete and as original or better, that is a rather rare surviving artifact.
Unique for sure, doesn’t strike me as being old enough to come with stock convertible rails. The rail caps are not typical of that timeframe.
 
Having restored the cabinet for my wife's 1926/1927 9' Royal, i'm familiar with the 1926 catalogs.
1925 - 27 was probably the acme of BBC production including options, customs and apparently busy order book.

The Adam was a custom table from BBC (In their custom catalog, not the regular trade catalog) - probably few made.
"Eureka" conversion rails would be correct. Many of the custom tables were specified with Eureka conversion rails, but it can be assumed that the number of specific customs of any model might have been rather small.

It's a special table, and if unmolested/condition of essential components such as the convertible feature being and functioning as new, hard to place a "value" on. The usual: "Whatever someone is willing to pay for it." If they are compelled by that table, they probably won't find another.
If they just want a BBC with conversion rails, a few show up every now and then. Variable original quality, levels of "legacy" abuse & requiring more or less work to make playable.

For a table strictly for practice to compete, get a Diamond :)
& a heated 3C table.

The guy who really wants and can afford the Adam probably has space for a couple tables anyway.

smt
 
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