After reading all of the posts, and thank you for all of the responses by the way, I have heard alot from many who have been there before. Some might question motive and others might see legal liability and others might even see it was stealing food. The one thing that truly stood out to me is that my friend Kent davis learned from Ariel carmeli and then adapted his own techniques and they are great friends and wonderful things have come from that. Also if anyone knows jazznpool' Kent like I do there is a huge benefit the cue maker receives. the first thing is sharing his passion for making pool cues and allow someone to see into the mind to understand what love and care comes from these pieces of work. there were things that i learned that are never to be shared with anyone, and there are other things that i learned like being a perfectionist and knowing how dangerous the equipment is and so forth. He showed me how much he loves the game and how much he labors for those who buy his product. I worked an entire semester just so I could recieve my cue, put in timeless hours and produced things that he to this day still uses to assemble his cues. he saw the look in my eyes when I tirnedmy first forearm and put that coat on it to see the wood shine. I had people purchase the forearms I turned so that they could use it in their work. that was a great feeling. If it were about robbing the teacher I would pollute the sanctity of the art that cue making actually is, and I am not about to be ungrateful to someone who is willing to really show me how the basics are done. I have the same passion for pool that i do for baseball and I am just putting myself out there to see what someone might want to get. Im a broke single kid in his mid 20s that loves pool and worked just so I can be a part of something great. I even hot to help with the cue that made it in billiard digest, and it was an honor. If I were in the buisness of ripping off people I would sell cars not cues.
I want to add a couple of things to what I already said. First it seems like you have a great attitude toward the love of cuemaking & I congratulate you on that...outstanding. You must have a real love for what you are building because you certainly aren't doing it for the income. If I figured up what I've spent on equipment, wood, and parts over the past 10 years vs. what I've made selling cues....I seriously doubt I've broke even yet.

Secondly...when all of us here all speaking bad of hired help...we are in no way speaking of you personally. No one meant to imply that you have any desire for "ripping people off". We were just speaking from past experiences with shop helpers...no bad words were intended to be about you. If you really want to learn the "basics" as you stated then there is plenty of learning material now that wasn't available years ago. Start with Chris Hightowers book...his tapes/dvd's are excellent too. Unique Products has an entire line of videos that will teach everything needed to install wraps, ferrules, even make complete hustler cues. If you bought their small Cue Companion repair lathe (package 3) and then watched their videos...you could immediately build a nice sneaky or j/b. This is the best advice I can offer. Get your own lathe...then use the material available to teach yourself.
Best of luck to you in whatever career path you may choose.
