Butterwheel
Registered
To all those saavy in tip grooming:
Is there a trick to getting a good, lasting burnish on the sides of layered water buffalo tips? I'm talking about the Talisman med WB in particular (I really love this tip, went through dozens before settling on this one.)
I've successfully installed quite a few tips, both for myself and others, mostly layered pigskin of some kind. Without much effort, I can burnish the sides of a pigskin tip to a beautiful, hard, shiney surface that lasts. But try as I might, the buffalo tip just won't "hold" the burnish. I can get it nice and shiney and relatively hardened, but after a night at the table, the sides of the tip look a lot like the top
.
I've tried progressive sanding all the way up to 2000 grit - no help. I've burnished with and without wetting the leather, using many different tools/materials including leather, the backside of wet/dry sandpaper, denim, block of dense hardwood, The Ultimate Tip Tool, even glass. In desparation, I purchased a bottle of "Liquid Leather Burnisher", but that didn't make any difference either. No matter if I do it slow and gentle or spin the cue until it gets warm. All these produce a decent finish at first, but the tip sides always goes back to rough and dull after a few rack.
Any advice appreciated, except for "just take it to a professional"
Is there a trick to getting a good, lasting burnish on the sides of layered water buffalo tips? I'm talking about the Talisman med WB in particular (I really love this tip, went through dozens before settling on this one.)
I've successfully installed quite a few tips, both for myself and others, mostly layered pigskin of some kind. Without much effort, I can burnish the sides of a pigskin tip to a beautiful, hard, shiney surface that lasts. But try as I might, the buffalo tip just won't "hold" the burnish. I can get it nice and shiney and relatively hardened, but after a night at the table, the sides of the tip look a lot like the top
I've tried progressive sanding all the way up to 2000 grit - no help. I've burnished with and without wetting the leather, using many different tools/materials including leather, the backside of wet/dry sandpaper, denim, block of dense hardwood, The Ultimate Tip Tool, even glass. In desparation, I purchased a bottle of "Liquid Leather Burnisher", but that didn't make any difference either. No matter if I do it slow and gentle or spin the cue until it gets warm. All these produce a decent finish at first, but the tip sides always goes back to rough and dull after a few rack.
Any advice appreciated, except for "just take it to a professional"