Will this cut a pro taper or will it only cut straight angled tapers in one pass? It appears that one center raises or lowers to set a straight angle like butts and carom shafts use. Is that correct? If so how can it cut the curved pro taper? The price is very good. If it will cut pro tapers in one continuous pass you should sell a ton of them.gsirca said:Hi All,The gs shaft machine will make your cue building much easyer,if you are creative you can do a lot more with this machine,cutting shafts are a pain, with this machine it is very easy...you can cut all tapers that cue builders use, you can cut 1/8 or up to a 1/4 cuts and more if you want,you can even turn square block to a dowel,with a little creative,i run 4 machines one for shafts and one for butts, and the other 2 to turn squares down to rounds,it takes 2 min. for a pass that is fast,plus you can turn the speed down if you like ,it will cut smoother at a lower speed,The saw blades last for years,i have used mine for five years and still have lots left before i have to sharpen ,it is very quiet also if you get the right table saw, belt drive is the best for less noise.........so if u want less work with great results this machine is for you...........plus i am always here to help,but it is very easy,it runs it self. Greg (gsirca@yahoo.com)
I am not sure what nerve I touched here, but I did not get a answer. The machine David and Jerry designed has a hinge system to allow the cue to follow a taper bar, thus being able to create a pro taper or any other taper you have a bar for. I do not sell saw machines even though I own four of them, so I was not trying to take business away from you. I was asking a question that I felt needed to be addressed. I do not see a taper bar, on this machine. If it only cuts straight tapers then all you had to say was it only cuts straight tapers. It is still a great deal if that is all it will do. It would serve the purpose for roughing in shafts and totally tapering butts. Or it would serve the whole tapering process for carom and snooker cues. If you oversell an item you will have unhappy customers. If you tell it like it is then you will have happy customers. I was just wanting you to clarify what it will and will not do. Here is your quote: "you can cut all tapers that cue builders use". The machine does not look like it has a taper bar to create a curved taper like the pro taper so I was wanting to understand how "you can cut all tapers that cue builders use"????? Just explain to us how it does it.gsirca said:Cue man... you know what this shaft machine will do, better then anybody,so why would you ask.....if it was good enough Jerry Franklin it is good enough for all cue builders. Here is a little history....from your site
Jerry Franklin Inducted 2006
Jerry founded South West Cues in 1982, which soon became one of the most sought after cues out there among serious players. The waiting list is and has been, not months, but years to get one of the SW cues. They developed a rock solid hit that is much sought after. The short joint rings design that you see on so many cues now was first made popular by SW. SW also popularized the very tight fitting wood to wood joint and very close joint size tolerances with interchangeable shafts.
It was at SW cues that Jerry and another cuemaker David Kersenbrock made the first table saw tapering machine. This type of machine can now be found in many cuemakers shops. Jerry was always open to showing other cuemakers his shop and once said, "If someone knows enough to ask the right question, they deserve an answer." SW cues probably have influenced more of the newer cuemakers than any other cue out there. Jerry passed away in 1996 and is missed by all who knew him. His company is still going under his wife Laurie's leadership. We think Jerry would be proud of that.