Hit of Phenolic Radial joints

Klopek said:
Wondering how phenolic radial cues hit as compared to standard 5/16x14 stainless jointed cues?. Thanks,:)
Good question. I've been wondering myself. Seems like no one wants to take the first stab at this one. Anyways, i'll be waiting for some reply's also.
 
I prefer flat face big pin over ss collars with small pins myself.
I love the radial screw.
 
Can of worms discussion. I would summarize it as the 5/16 steel jointed cue has a sharper tinky kind of hit and the radial w phenolic is a more solid one piece feel. I have hit and liked both types of joints but I prefer the radial and phenolic myself. Chris.
 
i like the phenolic collars and 3/8-10 pin preferably the one with the .308 minor,raidal or 3/8-11 in brass,steel or G-10.seems to have more feedback than the steel jointed cues.
 
Chris Byrne said:
Can of worms discussion. I would summarize it as the 5/16 steel jointed cue has a sharper tinky kind of hit and the radial w phenolic is a more solid one piece feel. I have hit and liked both types of joints but I prefer the radial and phenolic myself. Chris.
Couldn't have said it better myself.

Gene
 
You know this could be argued all day but I just think the radial pin is pretty good. So is the new 3/8 10 ACME. Tight fit and it does not keep getting loose.
I dunno if SW and DPK are the most sought after hit in cues but they do have big pins and flat face.
 
JoeyInCali said:
You know this could be argued all day but I just think the radial pin is pretty good. So is the new 3/8 10 ACME. Tight fit and it does not keep getting loose.
I dunno if SW and DPK are the most sought after hit in cues but they do have big pins and flat face.

not keep getting loose?

What pin does get loose?
If the shaft loosens with play - something is very wrong.

Acme threads are designed for moving things along - feed screw -
not holding things together.

Where is DaveK when you need him?

Dale
 
pdcue said:
not keep getting loose?

What pin does get loose?
If the shaft loosens with play - something is very wrong.

Acme threads are designed for moving things along - feed screw -
not holding things together.

Where is DaveK when you need him?

Dale

Drunk.

But even drunk I would agree that any reasonable thread properly fit should not loosen in play, including radial, v-point, and acme.

Ball-screws move very easily, but they have no application in joints ;)

Acme was really designed for strength, as was butress thread (that one lifts buildings). Precision acme does a good job for linear motion application as you say, it wears better and backlash compensation is easier I think. Acme in a joint would likely be done for the same reason as the radial, less chance of the threads tearing-out, something I'd be nervous about using small V-form threads in wood.

Let's keep these 'hit' discussions going. Within 5 years I'd like to see a full and proper definition along with a series of tests to measure it. I'll post up some progress on that front before our snow melts.

Dave
 
I can't speak for everybody who uses acme style pins, but I make mine for alignment. V-groove threads always seemed to have inconsistencies for me, with the pin resting on the softer side of the wood, which is not dead nuts center. Of course it was never anything severe, but enough that I wanted to have a pin with a straight & consistent barrel that would fit flush & smooth into the shaft's bore. The threads do nothing but hold it in place. With v-groove threads we have to depend on the threads to do everything, align AND lock. Again, nothing wrong with v-groove threads. They just are not accurate enough for what I want, so I make my own flat bottom thread pins.

As for phenolic big pin joints vs. stell collared small pin joints, I think there is enough difference to feel. I generally build big pin flat faced joints, but at times do the steel jointed 5/16-14. Everything else the same in the consistency of my cues, I can tell a difference in the hit & feel. Anything different in the cue will give a different feel, a different sound, a different reaction to impacting the CB. The differences might be subtle or might be vivid, but it doesn't take a genius to know that there will be a difference in performance based on material & build style. Some players may not ever be in tuned enough to feel the differences & some players know it right away. That's why everybody has differing opinions. But mechanically & physically speaking, there will be a difference between a big pin phenolic collared joint & small pin steel collared joint. They will resonate differently, giving a different feel (feedback), they will sound different, they will have differing effects on the overall stiffness of the jointed area of the cue, and because of the other reasons they will cause different playability characteristics, even if subtle. It shouldn't take a machine to figure that one out. That's just common knowledge of the different materials' mechanical properties & vague knowledge of physics.

The major difference comes in to play when there are so many different builders using their own techniques & chiming in like they are vastly experienced in all of the joint systems. Reality is we all have our favorite joints & our experience is biased toward what we favor, and understandably so. To actually test any of this, a builder would have to make a universal joint on one cue & shaft that can be changed from one joint type to the other without changing anything else on the cue. I don't particularly care to do it, and know no other builders who would really want to waste time doing it. The projected results can be argued all day but none of can prove anything until this cue is built. So it'll remain a debate likely forever. We'll all still use what we favor, anyway.
 
Reality is we all have our favorite joints
My favorite ones come from Jamaica.

I'm all for more contact.
No quick-release here.
 
Would that be the primary joint's or the seconds\imperfect ones that that have a more solid hit.:D
 
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