<double sigh> Ok, lets do this.
1. Kamui tips are good. In fact I recently reccmmended someone on this very forum to try one, if he is not concerned with the price of the tip. HOWEVER there are at least a handful of tips with equal or close to equal performance in my estimation. Kamui tips are commonplace at the moment so I recommended it over the others that may be more difficult to get hold of. For anyone that had to take a intro course in marketing or economics at the university, it just gets old to see how Kamui uses every cliche straight out of marketing 101 and people actually falling for it, the high pricing beeing one of those strategies. You would think that people would see through all the marketing bs and flashy videos, but there are psychological mechanisms at work that prevent this (I don't want to bore you more than necessary).
2. I am not a tip installer by trade. I have put on my own tips ever since I first bought a cue. At the moment I don't own a lathe either. I used to borrow one but I don't any longer. There are not a whole lot of things that can go wrong during a tip install, as long as you: a: make sure the tip and ferrule bond properly, b: do not overheat the tip and c: Cut it in such a way as not to delaminate it. A lot of the elaborate techniques used by some tip installers are in my opinon detrimental to the performance of the tip (excessive burnishing for one). I base my opionion on comparisons with a so called "proffesionally" installed tip and my "amateur hackjob". Guess which performed better?
3. Authorized installer: I am sorry but I think this is a gimmick. Its not a Mercedes its a piece of leather(or more precisely several pieces glued together). And the voucher thing looks suspiciously like one of those classic scams, though it may not be. I don't really have any stake in this, so I don't know why I bothered to post this to begin with, but here we are.
Straighpool,
I *love* the <double sigh> intro...it says so much with so little. Like, "I am so smart, and you are so stupid, I've dealt with this before, but out of the goodness of my heart I will see what kind of patience I can give to your ridiculous position". Good stuff out of the gate!
It is certainly odd that you are able to perceive Kamui's strategies and classify them as "marketing 101", yet fail to understand why it is effective. Damn, those marketing textbook guys have been fooling all those students for so long now!! Is it the marketing 101 classes that are giving out the wrong info?
Also, I did not make any claim, and I don't believe Kamui made any claim, that it is only possible to install a Kamui tip if you are an authorized installer. If you want to cash in the voucher with Kamui, or purchase products at dealer cost, then you need to be an authorized installer. That't it.
See my previous post about the irrelevance of the complexity of the product.
I'm sure you do a great job. I doubt the topic of this thread will affect you in the least.
KMRUNOUT