On a shaft, what is this called?

Even though I did not ask the question I've always wanted to know this also but never got around to asking. Thanks for the replies !

I do have another question though. out of the small amount of cues that I have some have the matrix on the shafts while others do not. Is this a factor in shaft quality or is the quality usually determined by the grain per inch ?

Thanks ![/QUOTE

Shaft quality is determined by many variables. The bottom line most important variable is how well it performs.

If you do not see that pattern in some of your shafts, they are probably not made from hard maple. It is less pronounced in some other woods.

Kelly
 
Even though I did not ask the question I've always wanted to know this also but never got around to asking. Thanks for the replies !

I do have another question though. out of the small amount of cues that I have some have the matrix on the shafts while others do not. Is this a factor in shaft quality or is the quality usually determined by the grain per inch ?

Thanks !

The only thing for certain in judging quality of shaft wood is nothing is for certain.
Ive known shaft wood with 25 to 30 GPI that played like a dog when finished. Ive also
known shaft wood with 7 to 8 GPI that played good or great when finished.

Color of shaft wood does not guarantee a good playing shaft.
GPI does not guarantee a good playing shaft.
Tap tone doesnt guarantee a good playing shaft.
Where the wood was harvested from doesnt guarantee a good playing shaft.
Did I mention no guarantees :wink:

The closest you can come to a guarantee of a good playing shaft is to develop the right taper
and rely on your past experience in selecting your wood. It can still be a crap shoot though.

You can call it spine or matrix or whatever - Its still edge grain and it doesnt matter if its
quarter sawn or flat sawn its still going to be present in a maple shaft. You may not see it but it
is there.

Only a guess but if you cant see it in some of your shafts I would think the shafts are a
low GPI causing a wide area of spine/matrix/edge grain/whatever that is not as visible as most. That does not
mean those shafts are low quality.
 
Flat VS Quartersawn?

It's just quarter sawn- medulary ray - NOT SPINE!!!!!!!!

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This grain pattern is "quartersawn" and is characterized by the ray flecks that are circled in your photo. Ray Flecks: Rays, or strips of cells, store food and transport it horizontally throughout the tree. Naturally occuring ray flecks appear as lines across the grain of the wood surface. Hope this helps, Kent




Hi
Please forgive me, but can you please tell me how you can tell by looking at a single dowel, or shaft that it was cut from a flatsawn, or quartersawn board? Once it's turned round there is no difference. Looking at the end of the dowel may give some reference to a dowel cut from a board that was cut from very near the center of the log, vs near the outside.
These Ray flecks, spine,etc, and growth lines are going to show the same on a dowel cut from a board harvested either way.

Dennis <---Hoping to learn something
 
searingcue said:
....Please forgive me, but can you please tell me how you can tell by looking at a single dowel, or shaft that it was cut from a flatsawn, or quartersawn board? Once it's turned round there is no difference. Looking at the end of the dowel may give some reference to a dowel cut from a board that was cut from very near the center of the log, vs near the outside.
These Ray flecks, spine,etc, and growth lines are going to show the same on a dowel cut from a board harvested either way.

Dennis <---Hoping to learn something

I believe QS lumber is a little better for shafts because (in general) there will be a little more radial run off in flat sawn boards due to the taper of the tree (imagine the log laying flat and a flat sawn board sliced off the top). But once the shaft blank is cut from the board, I agree you can't tell how the board was milled.

Kelly
 
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This grain pattern is "quartersawn" and is characterized by the ray flecks that are circled in your photo. Ray Flecks: Rays, or strips of cells, store food and transport it horizontally throughout the tree. Naturally occuring ray flecks appear as lines across the grain of the wood surface. Hope this helps, Kent




Hi
Please forgive me, but can you please tell me how you can tell by looking at a single dowel, or shaft that it was cut from a flatsawn, or quartersawn board? Once it's turned round there is no difference. Looking at the end of the dowel may give some reference to a dowel cut from a board that was cut from very near the center of the log, vs near the outside.
These Ray flecks, spine,etc, and growth lines are going to show the same on a dowel cut from a board harvested either way.

Dennis <---Hoping to learn something


WHO is this guy, and what does he know about cues :grin:
 
Here's a pretty good pic.

Structure-of-a-typical-hardwood.jpg
 
why do predator shafts use only those pieces?

I was wondering the same thing. On every predator I have owned this pattern has run down each of the ten segments. I always thought that this was the stiffest part of the shaft, and thats why they used it.
 
It's the radial face of the board, medulary rays are what the lines are called. No matter how the lumber was processed, once turned round, the rays will be evident. Every hardwood in the world has this, not just maple. I & a lot of others call it, "spine", because it looks like the backbone, as stated. It also tends to be the stiffer edges of the wood, which is why quarter & rift sawn lumber is so highly sought after.
 
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If I pick out straight grained shaft dowels how can I tell if they were quarter sawn or flat sawn? For that matter how can you tell how any dowel or square was sawn?
 
If I pick out straight grained shaft dowels how can I tell if they were quarter sawn or flat sawn? For that matter how can you tell how any dowel or square was sawn?

In a dowel, you can't tell. Once turned round there's no way to know how it was milled. In a square, you can have a fair idea if you can see the entire lot. With squares, if the grain runs diagonal on much of, at least half of the lot, then it's been flat sawn. Quarter sawn wood will leave ALL the squares with the grain running parallel to edge. So if you see a pallet of shaft squares & none of the grain runs diagonal across the end grain, then it's a very good chance the wood was quarter sawn.

In quartered lumber, the grain will all run down the face of the board, none on the edge of the board. In flat sawn, most of the boards will have grain running along the edge of the board, some at an angle, and a few out of the center that will be quarter sawn with the grain running down the face. Flat sawn lumber is irregular from board to board where quarter sawn is pretty consistent in grain orientation to the boards.

The major difference with quarter sawn wood and flat sawn wood is stability. With flat sawn, it has to be strapped down in the kiln to keep it from warping, cupping, curling, bowing, twisting, cracking, etc. Once dry it's flat lumber but full of internal stress. This is why it binds & twists when being cut into squares, and moves during the shaft making process. It takes a long time to get them stabilized & even then it's a high waste deal.

Quarter sawn wood is relieved of stress by the cut, before it's dried. It can be stacked & stickered in the kiln with no binding & once dry it's still flat & crack free & stable. I just cut four logs last winter, quarter milled & dried them to 4%, then cut shaft squares & dowelled them. Cutting the boards to squares, then dowelling the squares took a day. That same day I grabbed two random dowels & in one thick, full cut, took them to a 13mm tapered shaft, finish size. That was 2 weeks ago & both shafts are still very much straight. Neither has been hung up. One was laid flat on the concrete floor & the other suspended horizonally over a lathe, resting on the ends with no support undewr the middle 20". I have no doubt in the world that quarter sawn wood makes the most stable & stress free shafts. I have proven that to myself. The entire experiment was to process shafts from trees & knowing everything every step of the way with no questions or doubts about how the wood had been processed because I did it myself. My conclusion was/is that i'll likely never buy another maple board or shaft blank in my life because I haven't found any that left me without doubt. Doing it this way gives me piece of mind.
 
I wasn't talking about boards, just well seasoned dowels or individual squares. Five or ten years seasoning is enough to sort out the good from the bad. If they move, they leave.
 
Quarter sawn wood is relieved of stress by the cut, before it's dried. It can be stacked & stickered in the kiln with no binding & once dry it's still flat & crack free & stable. I just cut four logs last winter, quarter milled & dried them to 4%, then cut shaft squares & dowelled them. Cutting the boards to squares, then dowelling the squares took a day. That same day I grabbed two random dowels & in one thick, full cut, took them to a 13mm tapered shaft, finish size. That was 2 weeks ago & both shafts are still very much straight. Neither has been hung up. One was laid flat on the concrete floor & the other suspended horizonally over a lathe, resting on the ends with no support undewr the middle 20". I have no doubt in the world that quarter sawn wood makes the most stable & stress free shafts. I have proven that to myself. The entire experiment was to process shafts from trees & knowing everything every step of the way with no questions or doubts about how the wood had been processed because I did it myself. My conclusion was/is that i'll likely never buy another maple board or shaft blank in my life because I haven't found any that left me without doubt. Doing it this way gives me piece of mind.

How is the grain orientation on those two? I bet they are perfect .
 
Quarter sawn wood is relieved of stress by the cut, before it's dried.

There is a reason guitar builders use QS blanks for necks and frets.
They want the best cut out of the tree that has a better chance of staying straighter, longer. Not only the cut but the kiln schedule can make a difference.


<~~~jmo................
 
In a dowel, you can't tell. Once turned round there's no way to know how it was milled. In a square, you can have a fair idea if you can see the entire lot. With squares, if the grain runs diagonal on much of, at least half of the lot, then it's been flat sawn. Quarter sawn wood will leave ALL the squares with the grain running parallel to edge. So if you see a pallet of shaft squares & none of the grain runs diagonal across the end grain, then it's a very good chance the wood was quarter sawn.

In quartered lumber, the grain will all run down the face of the board, none on the edge of the board. In flat sawn, most of the boards will have grain running along the edge of the board, some at an angle, and a few out of the center that will be quarter sawn with the grain running down the face. Flat sawn lumber is irregular from board to board where quarter sawn is pretty consistent in grain orientation to the boards.

The major difference with quarter sawn wood and flat sawn wood is stability. With flat sawn, it has to be strapped down in the kiln to keep it from warping, cupping, curling, bowing, twisting, cracking, etc. Once dry it's flat lumber but full of internal stress. This is why it binds & twists when being cut into squares, and moves during the shaft making process. It takes a long time to get them stabilized & even then it's a high waste deal.

Quarter sawn wood is relieved of stress by the cut, before it's dried. It can be stacked & stickered in the kiln with no binding & once dry it's still flat & crack free & stable. I just cut four logs last winter, quarter milled & dried them to 4%, then cut shaft squares & dowelled them. Cutting the boards to squares, then dowelling the squares took a day. That same day I grabbed two random dowels & in one thick, full cut, took them to a 13mm tapered shaft, finish size. That was 2 weeks ago & both shafts are still very much straight. Neither has been hung up. One was laid flat on the concrete floor & the other suspended horizonally over a lathe, resting on the ends with no support undewr the middle 20". I have no doubt in the world that quarter sawn wood makes the most stable & stress free shafts. I have proven that to myself. The entire experiment was to process shafts from trees & knowing everything every step of the way with no questions or doubts about how the wood had been processed because I did it myself. My conclusion was/is that i'll likely never buy another maple board or shaft blank in my life because I haven't found any that left me without doubt. Doing it this way gives me piece of mind.



hell of a post brother, very well explained. I don't know if you guys realize but that was golden info right there....
 
In a dowel, you can't tell. Once turned round there's no way to know how it was milled. In a square, you can have a fair idea if you can see the entire lot. With squares, if the grain runs diagonal on much of, at least half of the lot, then it's been flat sawn. Quarter sawn wood will leave ALL the squares with the grain running parallel to edge. So if you see a pallet of shaft squares & none of the grain runs diagonal across the end grain, then it's a very good chance the wood was quarter sawn.

In quartered lumber, the grain will all run down the face of the board, none on the edge of the board. In flat sawn, most of the boards will have grain running along the edge of the board, some at an angle, and a few out of the center that will be quarter sawn with the grain running down the face. Flat sawn lumber is irregular from board to board where quarter sawn is pretty consistent in grain orientation to the boards.

The major difference with quarter sawn wood and flat sawn wood is stability. With flat sawn, it has to be strapped down in the kiln to keep it from warping, cupping, curling, bowing, twisting, cracking, etc. Once dry it's flat lumber but full of internal stress. This is why it binds & twists when being cut into squares, and moves during the shaft making process. It takes a long time to get them stabilized & even then it's a high waste deal.

Quarter sawn wood is relieved of stress by the cut, before it's dried. It can be stacked & stickered in the kiln with no binding & once dry it's still flat & crack free & stable. I just cut four logs last winter, quarter milled & dried them to 4%, then cut shaft squares & dowelled them. Cutting the boards to squares, then dowelling the squares took a day. That same day I grabbed two random dowels & in one thick, full cut, took them to a 13mm tapered shaft, finish size. That was 2 weeks ago & both shafts are still very much straight. Neither has been hung up. One was laid flat on the concrete floor & the other suspended horizonally over a lathe, resting on the ends with no support undewr the middle 20". I have no doubt in the world that quarter sawn wood makes the most stable & stress free shafts. I have proven that to myself. The entire experiment was to process shafts from trees & knowing everything every step of the way with no questions or doubts about how the wood had been processed because I did it myself. My conclusion was/is that i'll likely never buy another maple board or shaft blank in my life because I haven't found any that left me without doubt. Doing it this way gives me piece of mind.


My post was only intended to point out that no one can really tell by looking at an already turned dowel, or shaft, whether it was cut from a flat or quartersawn board.


Thank you,
Dennis
 
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