K
King Kong
Guest
I have a very old collectable cue with an Ivory joint and birds eye maple forearm. The cue plays great and is old school splice. The metal pin inside the forearm appears to be rattling inside the cue. The cue in value is worth "ALOT!" So, I want to know if this problem has been encountered before and how it was dealt with??
I was thinking its time for a refinish and maybe a leather wrap! But, it has that Courtland green speckled wrap on it that is priceless now! So, I have quite a delimma. Keep it as it is and look at it only! or have it taken apart and reassembled and stablized. If reassembled there goes the wrap? I was not sure if the irish linen could be saved or not?
I was curious if the rattle of the weight pin in the forearm can be fixed and the wood stablized. The old sticks expecially curly maple tend to move and destablize. Please help!!! Any and all suggestions are welcomed.
I have even thought about taking pictures of the cue before the work is done to document its prominance and authenticity because I keep hearing refinishing deminishes the value? It would be worth fixing to me as I like to play with my cues not just look at them.
I have three local cue makers that could do the work. Tim scruggs, bob fry & Tony (black Boar). The cue is an old JOSS and I am leaning toward timmy because he worked for JOSS back then and its probably his work any way. Any thoughts would be greatly apperciated. Thanks!
King Kong
I was thinking its time for a refinish and maybe a leather wrap! But, it has that Courtland green speckled wrap on it that is priceless now! So, I have quite a delimma. Keep it as it is and look at it only! or have it taken apart and reassembled and stablized. If reassembled there goes the wrap? I was not sure if the irish linen could be saved or not?
I was curious if the rattle of the weight pin in the forearm can be fixed and the wood stablized. The old sticks expecially curly maple tend to move and destablize. Please help!!! Any and all suggestions are welcomed.
I have even thought about taking pictures of the cue before the work is done to document its prominance and authenticity because I keep hearing refinishing deminishes the value? It would be worth fixing to me as I like to play with my cues not just look at them.
I have three local cue makers that could do the work. Tim scruggs, bob fry & Tony (black Boar). The cue is an old JOSS and I am leaning toward timmy because he worked for JOSS back then and its probably his work any way. Any thoughts would be greatly apperciated. Thanks!
King Kong