...Using any kind of damp/wet cleaning agent couldn't be good for either the slate or the cloth NOT TO MENTION having little to no effect in actually lifting the microscopic chalk dust that may be in the cloth fibers. IMO...
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I don't see how water is going to damage slate, and pool cloth is just like other cloth: getting it wet won't hurt it any more than getting your clothes wet when you wash them.
Further, a good wipe down with a damp cloth makes a huge difference in the way a commercial table looks and plays. Try it sometime.
I suppose if you really soaked a table it could damage the wood frame or the joint compound, but a damp rag doesn't hold that kind of volume.
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I used to think it was taboo to ever wipe the cloth with anything containing water. After several well-respected AZers said it was OK I gave it a try. IMO it really brings out both the appearance and the playability.
I brush every day. Once a week I vacuum right after brushing. About once a month I brush, vacuum, and then wipe everything down with a damp microfiber towel.
I use a lot more water than most say they use. Not dripping, but wet enough so that I have to let the cloth dry for a few hours before I can play. Wetting the cloth seems to tighten it up again (once it dries), and it improves the rail gutters. The whole surface just seems more uniform. And it looks so freakin' good!
I don't ever "damp cloth" my table.... Using any kind of damp/wet cleaning agent couldn't be good for either the slate or the cloth NOT TO MENTION having little to no effect in actually lifting the microscopic chalk dust that may be in the cloth fibers. IMO. ...
Just wondering how often to damp clothe the table?
I don't see how water is going to damage slate, and pool cloth is just like other cloth: getting it wet won't hurt it any more than getting your clothes wet when you wash them.
Further, a good wipe down with a damp cloth makes a huge difference in the way a commercial table looks and plays. Try it sometime.
I suppose if you really soaked a table it could damage the wood frame or the joint compound, but a damp rag doesn't hold that kind of volume.
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Go ahead and get that cloth wet, and see what happens:wink:
Wet is an overstatement. We are talking about a quarter cup of water over an entire table, and some of that stays in the rag.
I never thought the cloth shrank after wiping, but it obviously picks up chalk.
You haven't said what bad thing will happen. Maybe it should be obvious to me but it isn't. Why should we not do this? I'm open to being convinced.
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Cloth stays tight because the fibers of the cloth are stretched like rubber bands, always trying to pull back into a relaxed position, but they can't because the cloth is stretched tight and anchored in that position. When I install simonis on a 9ft table, I stretch it very tight at 1 3/4" side to side, then tight as I can end to end, and trust me, the cloth is on tight as hell. But I know mechanics that wet the cloth first, then stretch it 6" side to side when they're installing it. So here's something to think about. If I can only stretch it 1 3/4" side to side when it's dry, where do you think all the rest of that 6" stretch is coming from, if it's not the fibers of the weave slipping on one another to allow the cloth to be pulled 6"? If you wet the cloth after its been stretched and installed other than surface cleaning it, you will do nothing but providing the lubricant for the fibers to lose their dry hold on each other, which is what's keeping the cloth springy tight. Wool/nylon don't shrink when it gets wet, it's not like cotton. Wash a wool shirt in a washing machine on cold, when you first take that shirt out and look at it, it looks bigger than it was before you washed it. Now throw it in the dryer on high heat. After it's dry, it'll never fit you again because it'll be way to small. Heat shrinks wool/nylon, water adds to making it lose is memory to shrink back to its original size.