Thank you very much for the reply. I was hoping they were not some cheap knock offs they we played so much with.Hello, Dan.
I’m delighted that you have enjoyed reading the thread, sir, and sincere thanks for sharing your story.
Your set looks like Aramith Premiers to me… possibly the most successful and popular pool balls ever cast.
Best wishes,
RC.
Yup, they are a memory. ive kept them this whole time. and th 8ball and 9ball wooden racks signed by the owners and regulars.Aramith Premiers might not be rare or considered particularly collectible by some perhaps, Dan, but they’re still excellent pool balls for sure.
Most importantly here, of course, is all the wonderful memories of great times and camaraderie they evoke for you, dear chap.
ordered the rack from here.set of baseball balls
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ARAMITH BASEBALL GAME 2-1/4
1 High longevityThe PREMIUM resin with Vitrotech technology hardens and vitrifies the surface for durable brightness. 2 Low yearly table costSmooth surface reduces drastically the table cloth wear resulting in far less cloth and ball replacement. 3 Made of Aramith PremiumAramith Phenolic resin...canadabilliard.com
One set left
33.00 shipping for 300.00 and 9.00 import to the US
Got mine the other day.
So that's a Hyatt Brunswick Centennial set and the cue ball while original is very very damaged. All those "gold swirls" are cracks in the phenolic resin from hundreds and hundreds of cue strikes.I hope this is in the right area. I bid on an old set of Brunswick "Dot Centennials" . From the pictures I could see. I thought the cue ball was just badly damaged by cue strikes. Turns out this blue dot cue ball has an almost perfect finish. It has gold swirls. I know from the finish of all the balls this is not a set I can say I have seen. Anyone know if Hyatt issued special sets or is this common? I tried to replace the 9 ball due to the washed out yellow stripe. But after seeing the finish, the original balls have a wider black circle and deeper finish. I know my pictures are not great, but hope you can see what I am talking about. Thank youView attachment 787241View attachment 787242View attachment 787242
Thank you for all your information. I just could not see how the cracks would turn gold and that is why I had to ask. In person it looks good. Maybe I need to start hitting the heck out of a few of my cue balls and see in I can make another one. Have a feeling I would need more years than I have left. Thank you again.So that's a Hyatt Brunswick Centennial set and the cue ball while original is very very damaged. All those "gold swirls" are cracks in the phenolic resin from hundreds and hundreds of cue strikes.
The ghosting you see is common in the older Hyatt sets and is bleed from the black resin that was engraved in over time. Not a negative at all and helps date the period of manufacture for the balls.
The original 9ball is probably 10 to 12 years older than the replacement and was made in the 70's while the original set is most likely late 50's to very early 60's
I am new to this forum, but I rotate all the sets I collect. Now, only if they are smooth and will not damage my table cloth. But I find it fun to use all makes and years of sets. I do not have any "top tear" sets, but if I was to pick my best playing set....... My 90's-2000's Aramith premiums are probably the most predictable. But it is fun to play with an old Hi-Skore set made of who knows what plastics. Just my opinion. And some older sets I have damaged because they were just to old and should not have been back in play. But that too has it's plus and minus.What billiard balls do you guys actually PLAY.
Collecting is one thing, but what type of balls actually hit the table when you want to play? And why?
I use Aramith Crown Standard.
Just askin!
I bounce between a set of Tournaments, a set of Centennials, and a sort of vintage set of Aramith Super Pro's.What billiard balls do you guys actually PLAY.
Collecting is one thing, but what type of balls actually hit the table when you want to play? And why?
I use Aramith Crown Standard.
Just askin!