SSDiver2112
Escott Cues
Great job, looks better than new! Hoping my repair goes as smoothly and looks as good when done.![]()
Thanks, post a picture if you can when yours is done.
Gary just emailed back so I hope to have a set of the soft jaws soon.
Great job, looks better than new! Hoping my repair goes as smoothly and looks as good when done.![]()
Absolutely. The repair for my friends POS cue. I bought a $50(plus shipping) piece of phenolic rolled linen to get a 1 inch piece. Also a few male/female 5/16-14 joint pins. He loves it. I had fun with it....and thanks again for your help.Looks great!
Don't you love putting $100 worth of work into a $20 cue?
Sometimes these jobs can be rewarding in other ways though.
Why did it fall apart in the first place?
You went to all that trouble you might have added threads at the ends of that tenon and at the bottom of the holes.
Ouch... that stick has lived a hard life!Thanks, post a picture if you can when yours is done.
Gary just emailed back so I hope to have a set of the soft jaws soon.
Great job! It's awesome that you were able to repair a cue with sentimental value!Ouch... that stick has lived a hard life!
I forgot all about this thread until you revived it.
I ended up getting around to my repair last Oct in order to get it back to my buddy at his birthday party.
Here's the pics....
How I got it....
View attachment 759969
That aluminum pin went ~4" into the forearm but as you can see, only about an inch into the handle.
This was my fix.....
View attachment 759970
I had to use that shoulder to make up the length for how much of the handle I had to take off to get to solid wood. Used a fully cured, dense, straight-grained piece of purpleheart for the tenon.
Glued up....
View attachment 759971
Used West Systems with 10% (by volume) additive for extra strength. The screws were only there to hold it together until the epoxy cured, once cured it isn't going anywhere.
Wrap channel recut.....
View attachment 759972
Leather wrap (might as well upgrade since we're in it this far).....
View attachment 759974
Unique's Wrap Magic fixture sure makes these a breeze!
I was happy it turned out well, he had almost forgot about it since I had it so long but his eyes really lit up when he unwrapped it!
It is a McDermott Tournament of Champions that he had won in the 90's sometime I believe. Much sentimental value.
Wish I would have got a couple better finished pictures but seems like I never think to do so.![]()
Nice job. Nice to see another cue saved from the trash bin.Ouch... that stick has lived a hard life!
I forgot all about this thread until you revived it.
I ended up getting around to my repair last Oct in order to get it back to my buddy at his birthday party.
Here's the pics....
How I got it....
View attachment 759969
That aluminum pin went ~4" into the forearm but as you can see, only about an inch into the handle.
This was my fix.....
View attachment 759970
I had to use that shoulder to make up the length for how much of the handle I had to take off to get to solid wood. Used a fully cured, dense, straight-grained piece of purpleheart for the tenon.
Glued up....
View attachment 759971
Used West Systems with 10% (by volume) additive for extra strength. The screws were only there to hold it together until the epoxy cured, once cured it isn't going anywhere.
Wrap channel recut.....
View attachment 759972
Leather wrap (might as well upgrade since we're in it this far).....
View attachment 759974
Unique's Wrap Magic fixture sure makes these a breeze!
I was happy it turned out well, he had almost forgot about it since I had it so long but his eyes really lit up when he unwrapped it!
It is a McDermott Tournament of Champions that he had won in the 90's sometime I believe. Much sentimental value.
Wish I would have got a couple better finished pictures but seems like I never think to do so.![]()
Good thread on this but I wanted to throw in I keep a little handheld metal detector that I use to check recycled wood for nails.I always run a strong magnet over the area if I'm going to cut it, especially in a forearm. Not a 100% solution as some stainless steels are non-magnetic, but I seem to get lucky the majority of the time. Most of the cheaper cues just use steel screws in that area. Saved me a few saw blades!![]()
Excellent! I think I will get one of these. Found one on Amazon for $20. I'm thinking it will be useful for a few things.Good thread on this but I wanted to throw in I keep a little handheld metal detector that I use to check recycled wood for nails.
I have a Garrett Pin Pointer that would work perfectly for this. Why I never thought of it is anyone's guess.Good thread on this but I wanted to throw in I keep a little handheld metal detector that I use to check recycled wood for nails.
A magnet won't pick up brass, aluminum, stainless steel, and other precious metals but the metal detector will sense them.
I think it was under 30 bucks when I bought it.
lucky
Next update.
I bored out both pieces to 15mm and then made a new tenon from an old broken cue. The collet slipped while drilling the hole. I knew I had to redo the finish any way, but I still wish it hadn't happened. A leather strap grips better, but it is really hard to control the runout compared to the collet.
Here’s some pictures of the dry fit. Just have to make the glue grooves, epoxy it and check it out tomorrow.
View attachment 664190
View attachment 664191
View attachment 664192
I do this with an old check book that has the carbon copy page, two different thicknesses and to fine tune I use cigarette papers. A good tip out of Cue mans book.You can loosen the collet and add thin sheets of whatever (regular paper, matchbook covers, etc.) to help center the piece being turned. I set the dial indicator up rotate to the high side and insert something there. Works pretty good.
They sell brass shim stock that comes in half thousandths from .001 on up. It's really cheap and you can cut strips with a sissors. Makes it really simple to dial in. I'll post a picture when I go out to the shop later.