What's the rush in gluing buttcaps Rick ???
I don't get it. Why would you use G5 on the buttcap and sleeve when you have West 206? Do you turn that buttcap the same day you glue it ?
The only 5-minute necessity to me is ferrule repair while customer is waiting.
What's the rush in gluing buttcaps Rick ???
I don't get it. Why would you use G5 on the buttcap and sleeve when you have West 206? Do you turn that buttcap the same day you glue it ?
The only 5-minute necessity to me is ferrule repair while customer is waiting.
Hey Joey,
There is not a rush or urgency it is because I have done my research and am not prone to urban legend about a legal disclaimer without engineering basis.
Yes, I can turn the cue the same day as I glue the joint ring or butt cap. When you do ferrules for a waiting customer, how long do you make them wait before you turn the ferrule. I usually wait about 20 minutes and tell them to wait over night before they hit balls.
I just explained the reasons why I feel it is a fine glue for the ferrules, joint rings and butt caps. If someone else wants to wait 24 or 36 hours to the next step in their process, I don't knock that. To each their own.
I was trained by the last cue maker who worked at Omega DPK and guess where I got the notion of using it? That does not mean it is right because someone else used it either. Absolutely not, but it sparked my questioning attitude about the stuff and all of my research and testing over time in the field led me to my acceptance and peace of mind.
I use shop acclimated Kiln dried wood blanks ( except Tulip wood and some others ) and don't mandate seasoning my butt wood and take cuts over years either and my cues don't warp. Does that make me stupid or smart? Just because someone tells you that this A and this B equals C, does not mean it is the only path to C. Because I have so many beta cues in the field and sold cues that I monitor, my argument to use of such a process has a basis other than everything that goes on in many other cue shops. I only care about what happens in my shop. It is called observation and with the injection of a null hypothesis within a model.
Saying stuff like
"this other 5 minute epoxy gives the G5 the 7 and out" is OK but "why" was my question.
One thing that G5 does pretty well is it has great adhesion quality and does not have the time to soak into the grain or shrink within the dowel annulus. I sand my components smooth at 320 grit and V file key way grooves on the dowel. This increases surface area and forms key ways for foundation not a rough cut RMS. 90 degree G5 slathered on both the sanded ID and OD and I am good to go.
Those who think G5 is a material that is for
"Temporary Use" have drunk the Kool Aid and bought into the urban legend that gets spun over and over.
BTW, I have a substantial cue repair business at my pool hall and do a lot of ferrules for my customer's cues. If I thought for one moment that G5 was not up to the task, I would never do their repairs using a product I did not believe in because they were waiting. They would have to leave their cue with me and pick it up on another day. That simple!
Just for the hell of it, take a ferrule, put tape on the bottom of the through hole and fill it up with G5. Wait a few days, put it in a vise and then hit the G5 with a center punch. Then make your own judgment and evaluation.
Of coarse this all is JMO,
Rick