Pierre Shakes
Registered
Slate has been held in place the same way for about 150 years - wood screws into a wood frame with shims of playing cards or business cards ever since. Okay, plastic tapers with teeth are a small improvement. Is there anything more important than the level of the table?
Around the year 2000, after twenty years in the biz, I saw a photo of how Billares Sam dealt with the problem of KEEPING it flat - thirty-eight MACHINE SCREWS with lock-nuts into a steel frame holding the slate up or down. I presumed it was a German idea, but no, Spain made the first real improvement in tables.
I bought a 9’ KimSteel (now KSteel) when we moved to the centre of town in 2007. We moved it elsewhere in the room three years later and it was still PERFECTLY level. Not 1/500th of an inch per foot out anywhere. Heaven. So four re-clothings and we did not have to re-shim or re-bondo at all. Players could count on it - no need to make slow shots by the rails to test the level.
In 2018 I got a 9’ Rasson Victory 2+ which has 22 devices which double-bolt into an aluminum extrusion that sits on the sturdy frame. The devices adjusts the slate until you have it exactly right, then you machine bolt & lock-nut it tight. Each one holds the slate both up and down. Peacock Billiards now has 4/9’s and one 12’ Rasson (which has heated slate and these fabulous devices). None go out of level with the - call it ‘untutored’ - public enjoying them thoughtlessly.
My two Unik 9’ tables stay flat also - they each weigh 2,000 pounds. Those are a story unto themselves.
Around the year 2000, after twenty years in the biz, I saw a photo of how Billares Sam dealt with the problem of KEEPING it flat - thirty-eight MACHINE SCREWS with lock-nuts into a steel frame holding the slate up or down. I presumed it was a German idea, but no, Spain made the first real improvement in tables.
I bought a 9’ KimSteel (now KSteel) when we moved to the centre of town in 2007. We moved it elsewhere in the room three years later and it was still PERFECTLY level. Not 1/500th of an inch per foot out anywhere. Heaven. So four re-clothings and we did not have to re-shim or re-bondo at all. Players could count on it - no need to make slow shots by the rails to test the level.
In 2018 I got a 9’ Rasson Victory 2+ which has 22 devices which double-bolt into an aluminum extrusion that sits on the sturdy frame. The devices adjusts the slate until you have it exactly right, then you machine bolt & lock-nut it tight. Each one holds the slate both up and down. Peacock Billiards now has 4/9’s and one 12’ Rasson (which has heated slate and these fabulous devices). None go out of level with the - call it ‘untutored’ - public enjoying them thoughtlessly.
My two Unik 9’ tables stay flat also - they each weigh 2,000 pounds. Those are a story unto themselves.