bubsbug said:I have got the fever! I dont have $8500 to buy a CNC cuemonster right now. I am thinking about buing a Gorton panograph machine. Is this a wort wild investment?? I know nothing about one. Later when I get experience may purchase sothing different.
pdcue said:YES, by all means. Gorts were the standard of the industry
prior to CNC. And you can get em for a song.
do a search, someone listed one a few months ago
they were giving it away.
Dale
Murray Tucker said:Silly question but I honestly don't know. Let's say that I am Joe upstart cuemaker with only a drill press and a metal lathe. Someone 500 miles away gives me a Gorton pantomill. By the time I pay to have it delivered and have all the jigs, fixtures, templates, etc. made so that I can inlay a cue how much money will I have spent?
And what's the average period of Gorton sitting in the shop collecting dust before being used?Michael Webb said:I would guess and say around 3G's for the initial start up., and each time you have a new template made, I believe they start at 100 and go up.
How we doing so far?
John - I received you message today, and my suggestion is to start with Pantograph Machine. We sell our Inlay Machine for about $2k, and we have templates starting at $35 for the pair. I am not sure the price of the Hightower's inlay machine, but I know he sells one also. As Mike and Murray say, it is very expensive to convert machinery to do the task you are wanting to do. My honest opinion is to start building basic cues, and then once you figure that out, move into Inlaying them. I had to learn to Crawl before I could walk - And I still stumble a lotbubsbug said:I have got the fever! I dont have $8500 to buy a CNC cuemonster right now. I am thinking about buing a Gorton panograph machine. Is this a wort wild investment?? I know nothing about one. Later when I get experience may purchase sothing different.
Thanks Jim and I do agree with you. I need to start putting cues together and learn now! (crawling)! I purchased Plumlee's equiptment, the gentlements who makes the Fussion shaft. He show me how to do it from start to finninh. I even know where to get awsome lamanite. Even if it does cost $1500 for a 4 x 8 sheet. I think that I am going to go this route because it is an immedieate turn aroun. meaning that I can build a shaft from start to finninh in just a couple of hours or less. this i think will give me good experience untill I can define good mapel wood for myself. Now I need just a couple of thing to make this happen. First, I need something to support wood on oppsite end of metal lave 13x 40 1-1/2 through hole. I have read that a chuck is best. Where can I get one?? I need a center dril, drill bit, tap to put in the inserts into shafts. I want a set up for uniloc and the 3 most common size and inserts. Can anyone tell me exactly what I need and the best place to get it. Thanks everyone. I have read topics about good taps and bad taps. I want good ones.billiardbum said:John - I received you message today, and my suggestion is to start with Pantograph Machine. We sell our Inlay Machine for about $2k, and we have templates starting at $35 for the pair. I am not sure the price of the Hightower's inlay machine, but I know he sells one also. As Mike and Murray say, it is very expensive to convert machinery to do the task you are wanting to do. My honest opinion is to start building basic cues, and then once you figure that out, move into Inlaying them. I had to learn to Crawl before I could walk - And I still stumble a lot![]()
Murray Tucker said:Silly question but I honestly don't know. Let's say that I am Joe upstart cuemaker with only a drill press and a metal lathe. Someone 500 miles away gives me a Gorton pantomill. By the time I pay to have it delivered and have all the jigs, fixtures, templates, etc. made so that I can inlay a cue how much money will I have spent?
pdcue said:Silly question but I honestly don't know.
Why would you conclude I know any more about estimating
any of those costs than you do?
Dale
bubsbug said:Thanks Jim and I do agree with you. I need to start putting cues together and learn now! (crawling)! I purchased Plumlee's equiptment, the gentlements who makes the Fussion shaft. He show me how to do it from start to finninh. I even know where to get awsome lamanite. Even if it does cost $1500 for a 4 x 8 sheet. I think that I am going to go this route because it is an immedieate turn aroun. meaning that I can build a shaft from start to finninh in just a couple of hours or less. this i think will give me good experience untill I can define good mapel wood for myself. Now I need just a couple of thing to make this happen. First, I need something to support wood on oppsite end of metal lave 13x 40 1-1/2 through hole. I have read that a chuck is best. Where can I get one?? I need a center dril, drill bit, tap to put in the inserts into shafts. I want a set up for uniloc and the 3 most common size and inserts. Can anyone tell me exactly what I need and the best place to get it. Thanks everyone. I have read topics about good taps and bad taps. I want good ones.
I will clarify for you. It is a laminated shaft! It is made by gluing 4 squares together, with grain running in opposite direction of each other and then turning round. Once glued up you can actually place shaft in saw machine, set depth and cut off 20 thousands untill shaft is slightly over size. Sand the rest by hand and presto. Because of the way its glued it isnt going to warp. My friend has made many, many, many of these and never no warping. infact he sells to atlas and mucchi, or did before selling me his equiptment. To me the shaft has a good feel. Kind of like a preditor, made similar to preditor but laminate instead of solid maple. maybe even better, Im experimenting now---jury still out?? I play with a z shaft preditor and i like it a lot but we will see! I will say that the shaft has a lot more give then I thought it would have. I just thought it would be a great way to practice procedural things like inserts and tapping, drilling.BLACKHEARTCUES said:I hope that I'm reading this wrong, but you say you can "build a shaft from start to finish in a couple of hours or less". If you do that every one of them will be warped in a week. I take 7 cuts, over a 20 week period, for each shaft. The last, 4 weeks apart...JER