Does anybody here use a durometer on the cushions? I am curious if it would be useful or not.

Thank you for the post. I am going to purchase one. Could you tell me how much of a difference there is between clothed and unclothed cushions? Also, what is a stint meter?OTLB said:I think its an excellent tool and I have one. It is important for a Mechanic to demonstrate to the customer the problem in a way they can understand. Numbers are easy to see on a tester. Using tools like this lend credibility to the trade and show you are professional. Just like a Dentist showing you an X-ray. Further you can monitor incoming cushions and know if there is a problem. Why would you want to go and put on new cushions if they weren't in spec. Having quality control methods prevents problems from occuring. Its also nice to play with and benchmark the hardness of rubber like old masters etc. Very helpful also when reviewing antique tables. Of course there are other methods which are very easy like throwing the ball and seeing how many rails you get etc but numbers don't lie. Its also nice to know what the spec is on the rubber as this is what a company like Brunswick for example would dictate to a supplier when ordering goods. Benchmarking rubber with cloth on and off with a tester is cool and again shows that you know what your doing. Just as customers like to see machinest levels, they love this one even more. also good to have a nice set of digital calipers to show how balls may be out of round. Well I hope I have shared some good tips here. I record rubber hardness on tables and keep it in a spreadsheet. It takes about 10 seconds and worth it. I am not sharing that info so don't ask me, sorry. You can start your own log if you want to know, its very easy.
By the way, a stint meter is also good to have. Lots of data to be collected with this tool also.
I think I will stop giving info out at this time as I am getting carried away.
Having worked in MFG(VP) for over 20 years and bringing companies through ISO and QS 9000 I will tell you the more testing you do the more you will understand.
I am big fan of E-BayOTLB said:One more tip, just buy a used one on EBAY, you don't have to waste your money. Good tools don't go bad. Hope this helps.
OTLB said:A stint meter is a tool that you make like the golfers have to determin the speed of the greens. Pick an elevation for a ball to roll from say 2 inches high with a travel of 10 inches and see how far the ball rolls. Create a spreadsheet and document results. Again it takes about 10 seconds but man the customer can't believe it.
I will tell you Diamond and Brunswick are way dif on the shore hardness scale.
ChrisShanklin said:Pat what did you pay for it?
PoolTable911 said:Hey Buddy,
I spent around $60 for a Shore Type A Durometer brand new. Click the link to the page.
http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/kk36/Pooltable911/Durometer-1.jpg
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&rd=1&item=260285122978&ssPageName=STRK:MEWA:IT&ih=016
Type A Used best for gum rubberreverend said:Did you get the Type A or D?
Works great, The electronic would be great to use but is just to exspensive.ChrisShanklin said:That one works just as well as the digital?
reverend said:
OTLB said:A stint meter is a tool that you make like the golfers have to determin the speed of the greens. Pick an elevation for a ball to roll from say 2 inches high with a travel of 10 inches and see how far the ball rolls. Create a spreadsheet and document results. Again it takes about 10 seconds but man the customer can't believe it.
I will tell you Diamond and Brunswick are way dif on the shore hardness scale.