Have you ever seen a cuemaker use a Panto?
I don’t know what your definition of “by hand” is, but it doesn’t sound like it.
If you’re ever down in this area, I’ll take you by Chris’s shop. It’s pretty damn amazing what he can do with that silly thing. By hand…
Regardless though, as I said, there’s nothing whatsoever wrong with the use of CNC in cuemaking. One way isn’t any better than the other. Just a different methodology…
Chris Nitti could build cues with a dull bush ax and they would still play great.Chris Nitti is a great cue maker and so I'm not going to put him or any other cue maker down who uses a pantograph because I consider it on the same plane as CNC. if you have an imagination you can do great things with it. You're tracing a shape with a stylus and a mechanical arm is doing the actual cutting.
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there was no such thing as CNC in the 60's,,,,,,,,,,,,,Your an idiot Joey, don’t try standup comedy you will starve to death.
Remember work at Rock Ket Engineering in the late 60’s we built part for fighter keys for war at time.
CNC was so much better then machinist try to do one operation at time.
We could hold tolerances of plus or minus couple of thousands.
Get technology.
there was no such thing as CNC in the 60's,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Jeez, I saw that coming a mile away,,,,,,,,,,,, Numerical control is not CNC. It's simple binary.![]()
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Jeez, I saw that coming a mile away,,,,,,,,,,,, Numerical control is not CNC. It's simple binary.
All of this article is at best mentioning CNC programming, using mainframe computers , big ass ones, to write code punched on paper 8 track binary tape to be run on NC machines. True CNC, Computerized Numerically Controlled stand alone machine tools could not exist until the late 70's when the small 8 bit individual computers were designed, so late 70's at best when true CNC machine tools hit shop floors. I know, I was there, I used them for 46 years.![]()
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Not true. I have one from the early 60's. Still in service but the tape reader has been replaced by more modern controls.there was no such thing as CNC in the 60's,,,,,,,,,,,,,
That statement is definitely over the top. There are many great cuemakers who have zero CNC equipment in their shop. Most top cuemakers use CNC but not all. Gilbert, Schick, Samsara, Schrager and Nitti have all turned put great cues without CNC. I built cues myself that sold for thousands of dollars without a CNC machine in my shop. I now have two CNC machines in my cue shop and two more in my machine shop.Any cue maker worth a damn uses a CNC machine to some degree.
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Well then that old NC machine is now motion controlled by a computer control, which is certainly not from the 60's. That is exactly my point.Not true. I have one from the early 60's. Still in service but the tape reader has been replaced by more modern controls.
Samsara has no CNC?That statement is definitely over the top. There are many great cuemakers who have zero CNC equipment in their shop. Most top cuemakers use CNC but not all. Gilbert, Schick, Samsara, Schrager and Nitti have all turned put great cues without CNC. I built cues myself that sold for thousands of dollars without a CNC machine in my shop. I now have two CNC machines in my cue shop and two more in my machine shop.
That statement is definitely over the top. There are many great cuemakers who have zero CNC equipment in their shop. Most top cuemakers use CNC but not all. Gilbert, Schick, Samsara, Schrager and Nitti have all turned put great cues without CNC. I built cues myself that sold for thousands of dollars without a CNC machine in my shop. I now have two CNC machines in my cue shop and two more in my machine shop.
That statement is definitely not true. There are many great cuemakers who have zero cnc equipment in their shop. Most top cuemakers use cnc but not all.
They might now, but those $10,000 very fancy cues from a couple of decades ago were done without cnc.Samsara has no CNC?
They openly mentioned their great CNC taper machine.
Thomas Wayne, himself, said he was very impressed by the cnc Samsara had in their shop.They might now, but those $10,000 very fancy cues from a couple of decades ago were done without cnc.
That statement is definitely over the top. There are many great cuemakers who have zero CNC equipment in their shop. Most top cuemakers use CNC but not all. Gilbert, Schick, Samsara, Schrager and Nitti have all turned put great cues without CNC. I built cues myself that sold for thousands of dollars without a CNC machine in my shop. I now have two CNC machines in my cue shop and two more in my machine shop.
I am one of those people who says "I will never buy a cue made with a CNC machine"...
Now, why I say that...I prefer a nice sharp point as opposed to a round top.
You can add Ned Morris to that list also, no CNC machine, I've seen his shop and he's very proud of that fact.