ericksakti
Registered
Im getting a moori tip for my playing cue soon...
what Im thinking is...
which to choose...
soft tip or medium tip or quick tip>
what Im thinking is...
which to choose...
soft tip or medium tip or quick tip>
Celtic said:Sure the soft will mushroom a touch more then the medium (although the soft is still a pretty hard tip really) but it is easy to take the sides off the tip and keep it in good shape when it starts to go.
Williebetmore said:What do you think is the best way to fix the mushrooming? My tip has a little mushroom (Moori medium) and I'm not sure what to do.
Williebetmore said:Celtic,
What do you think is the best way to fix the mushrooming? My tip has a little mushroom (Moori medium) and I'm not sure what to do. Thanks.
Flex said:The moori medium is a great tip. Played a lot with them. So too is the moori quick, definitely "faster" and great english too. You also might like to try out the Talisman tips, which I use on three of my shafts at present. All are the Talisman hard. Absolutely need to chalk after each shot, but they perform extremely well. Watch out for miscues if you don't chalk well... Of the moories and Talismans, and I've had all the moories on my shafts, I'd have to go with the Talisman... Love the way it plays. My two cents worth.
I've been using the Talisman WB Hard tips for several years, just put on a Moori Med to try it. Good tip, but I'd agree with Flex - I'll probably go back to the Talisman WB when I re-tip. Love the hit, no mushroooming or need to fuss with it, and lasts forever.Flex said:The moori medium is a great tip. Played a lot with them. So too is the moori quick, definitely "faster" and great english too. You also might like to try out the Talisman tips, which I use on three of my shafts at present. All are the Talisman hard. Absolutely need to chalk after each shot, but they perform extremely well. Watch out for miscues if you don't chalk well... Of the moories and Talismans, and I've had all the moories on my shafts, I'd have to go with the Talisman... Love the way it plays. My two cents worth.
Celtic said:Well, as was linked by Billy Bob there are tools that can fix tips that mushroom. I had a tip tool that actually slides onto the tip and by spinning the thing and pressing down it would cut the side of the tip that was mushroomed off and therefore the mushroom would be gone. Problem with the tool is it put alot of pressure on the tip in a twisting motion that could spin a well applied tip off.
Now I tend to use a variety of sand paper from course to very very fine. I use a piece about 2 inches by 2 inches and fold it in half such that the grain is on the outside. Now you have a think 2 X 1 peice of sand paper and by holding it with your thumb at the bottom of the paper pointing lengthwise along the paper you can alter the curve to the exact curve of the ferrule by differing pressure. With that done start with courser grains (if it is badly mushroomed) and with the sand paper not hitting the ferrule sand the edge of the tip carefully. As it gets closer to the ferrule and closer to being straight from the ferrule switch to the finer grained snadpapers to give yourself better control and protect your ferrule, also the trick is in the end not to have a roughed up sides of your tip. When the tip is very close to perfect switched to a very very fine grained sand paper, I dont know grits, I eyeball it but something that is hardly past normal paper. Using a small piece , about 1 inch by 1 inch I fold that in half and then put it around the tip lengthwise, holding the fine sandpaper over the edge of the tip with your thumb and forefinger you can sand the edge of the tip to the exact edge of the ferrule, the sandpaper you will be using at this point wont really hurt the ferrule as it is so fine. This last sandpaper will smooth the edge of the tip. Once that is done, I lick my thumb, and run it along the edge of the tip to moisten it abit to the point it just gets darker on the edge, dont go slobbering all over it.
Now you will want to burnish the tip alot, if you have the Miz's leather super tool burnishing thing you are golden, it owns. Otherwise you can use a bill of money, a small tear of cardboard off a pack of smokes, something that will allow you to get friction without doing any damage. Take the burnishing thing, fold it around the shaft once, using moderate pressure (not a whole lot, think holding a pen) you want to stroke the thing up and down the shaft really really fast and produce ALOT of heat. I get blisters almost every time on my thumb from burns. You want to get the shaft really hot and keep burnishing it, it will seal the edge of the tip and keep it from mushrooming again for a long time. Also combined with the saliva and the glue on the bottom of the tip at the ferrule the heat will make sure the tip is still locked onto that ferrule well.
Thats my long drawn out process. I am sure Blud and all other cuemakers with lathes are laughing at me now.
ericksakti said:Im getting a moori tip for my playing cue soon...
what Im thinking is...
which to choose...
soft tip or medium tip or quick tip>
blud said:...
TIPS,
I have my own layered tips, called " BLUD TIPS", I have had not the first person complain about my tips. I have had very good and postive feed back from all. This past week-end, I re-placed about 6 or 7 moories, [ moories are $40.00, mine are $30.00],with my tips. ALL of the players came by and said they really did like my tips.
...
blud
blud said:TIPS,
I have my own layered tips, called " BLUD TIPS", I have had not the first person complain about my tips. I have had very good and postive feed back from all. This past week-end, I re-placed about 6 or 7 moories, [ moories are $40.00, mine are $30.00],with my tips. ALL of the players came by and said they really did like my tips.
Looking at a moorie from the top, when it's crowned [sanded for shape and play], you see first a small dot of leather and then a glue line, then leather, then glue, and so on. The glue they use is much thicker than what I use. My tips show little or no glue lines looking at the top when sanded and shaped ready for play.
With the moorie tip, you have glue showing and you chalking leather and glue. With mine, your chalking the leather tip. They come in med, med-hard, and hard. i sell mainly the med.
On a scale from 1 to 10, med., are about a 6.5 to 7........
Write or call for more info.
830-232-5991
bludworth@direcway,com
thanks
blud
catscradle said:Just curious ...
You don't literally make these tips by hand, do you?