100% Rack.
As a side, after I had a rather bad experience with our local billiard shop, that prompted me to delve into hand tipping. Over a period of a year of a year or so, I must have purchased every tip tool and Doo Dad available in the market place.
This was both bad and good. Bad in that I bought a lot of unnecessary tip tools and good, in the way of I was able to figure out that the KISS Method is the best.
With a sharp knife or cutter, and a couple of other inexpensive tools, and a few mistakes, anyone can learn to do a tip as well as the guy in the video or Kim has done.
Honestly, even with a Hightower Deluxe now, I am hard pressed to do better than what Kim did. Only difference might be that I can do it quicker with a lathe.
When you're talking lathes and tools or just hand tools in general, you get what you pay for and should never cheap out.
When hand tipping, you absolutely do not need to spend much more than 50 bucks at the most to do a decent job. Keep in mind that one of the most expensive tools that you will need is the Cue Top Sander. Everything else is well under a 20 dollar bill.
Obviously, the installer in the video doesn't use one but chances are, you will.
BTW, at this moment in time, I am not so sure that I am the person to be using any sharp tools. My wife bought me a huge roast today so I can make beef jerky. After the roast had been in the freezer a bit, I proceeded to trim some of the fat off the top.
Well, I got a piece of frozen fat, cutting towards myself, the fat balked, the knife slipped and I bled like a stuck pig for about 20 minutes.
The good part is, CA glue also works wonderful for closing wounds. A little deeper and I would have been getting out the sewing kit.
Amazing that I didn't waken the War Dept. when I said the Eff word really loud.
I got my Japanese hand tools and some new Navigator tips from Japan.
Very sharp knives! so I`m pretty cautious when using them. Took some figuring out what works best, but I found a technique that worked for me.
This is the result:
I'm wondering how much did you pay for your Navigator tips. :grin:
A fairly reasonable 1500 JPY a piece.
Purchased from Newart I believe?![]()
Yes sir, that is correct.
Very good service and fast shipping.
Has anyone tried installing their Kamui Black tip using this method? If so, please post your thoughts on it! I'm thinking of purchasing the items individually. I also read that this method doesn't work well with phenolic/break tips, will Kamui Black Hard be okay with it?
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhU0lYPEGKc
Kit:
http://www.seyberts.com/products/Deluxe_Tip_Replacement_Kit-984-277.html
That Porper shaver is not the best tool for installing a tip, believe me I have tried...
Installing a Kamui hard with this method is absolutely no problem!
Installing a breaktip principally works also, but the hardness of knive's steel must be high quality + your personal skills also --> better you do not try if not yet done.
Has anyone tried installing their Kamui Black tip using this method? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhU0lYPEGKc
If so, please post your thoughts on it! I'm thinking of purchasing the items individually. I also read that this method doesn't work well with phenolic/break tips, will Kamui Black Hard be okay with it?
Kit:
http://www.seyberts.com/products/Deluxe_Tip_Replacement_Kit-984-277.html
Really? What wrong with this method?Sorry, mistake from my side, I wasn't able to watch the video that was behind the question.
My below answer refers to THAT video from 1st question when thread was starting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0TKkgHfL4s#t=103
Other methods "by hand" I do not recommend.
What tools do you use?
Great job Kim. What is that round thing? Looks like crepe or an eraser, perhaps?
where can i buy a japanese blade like that? i use my mom's very sharp deba knife for trimming tips. :grin-square:For those who wonder, these are the tools I use:
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