I think he is talking about cnc'd points like a Gina has, where the inside points are sharp but the top(outside) are rounded.puckdaddy said:Ive noticed some builders have an outer veneer which looks to be inlaid but yet the rest of the inner veneers seem to be spliced. Whats up with this and what purpose does it serve? thanks
this is exactly what Im talking about. Ive this this in Gina, Josswest, Phillipi, and maybe a few others.gmcole said:I think he is talking about cnc'd points like a Gina has, where the inside points are sharp but the top(outside) are rounded.
But if they are flat bottom then why only the outside rounded?dave sutton said:flatbottom points. they are cut in cnc like an inlay instead of a vgroove. i guess some believe by keeping much of the center of the cue in tact its stronger then a splice. i feel the opposite.
I've seen some of those rounded outermost points and some that are black in color are "poured' into the cavity after the pointy points have been glued on. What purpose? Makes point inlaying easier and not have the so called "glue lines/gaps".puckdaddy said:Ive noticed some builders have an outer veneer which looks to be inlaid but yet the rest of the inner veneers seem to be spliced. Whats up with this and what purpose does it serve? thanks
bandido said:I've seen some of those rounded outermost points and some that are black in color are "poured' into the cavity after the pointy points have been glued on. What purpose? Makes point inlaying easier and not have the so called "glue lines/gaps".
It is the machining process. A round cutter cannot cut a sharp end with flat bottom inlay. The inside points are cut up the middle in some cases giving two indential pieces to be laid in side by side, so they can remain sharp, but the outside veneer is going into a pocket with a round end so they round the outside veneer off to match the pocket.puckdaddy said:But if they are flat bottom then why only the outside rounded?
Poulos Cues said:Maybe I can get his question across?
What the OP is asking:
There are several cuemakers, like Gina and JossWest to name two, who use what look like "traditional" v- groove points, wrapped in spliced veneers- AND the outermost veneer (often black in color) is rounded at the top- making it look VERY similar to being CNC'd- and maybe it or all of them are?
The question;
WHY? and ....HOW?
Sheldon has shown in the past- what looked to be "spliced" veneers that were actually "flat-bottomed" (CNC'd) made to come together to a point- giving the viewer an illusion of "traditional" v-groove points wrapped in spliced / pointed veneers.
Again, HOW and WHY do these guys do this?
Hope this helps![]()
~Chris
:lol: :lol: Yeah. Check my avatar.JoeyInCali said:Do you also want to know the perils of hand-cutting to get the pointy end? The #1 reason why the maker is pushed to decide on doing this outside point with a cnc?
Insanity or eye stress?:grin: