I hope this is the correct forum. My question is this, what is the big deal with "PRE FLAG?" MASTER CHALK??Any info. would be appreciated.
Regards
Dave
it is the secrect formula before they changed the label and F'd everything up. I have yet to try this pre flag masters that I can remember. I do believe that Masters blue and green are different. I like green better unless you can find the rare african spider monkey pro chalk for $15 dollars a cube. That stuff is the nuts![]()
I hope this is the correct forum. My question is this, what is the big deal with "PRE FLAG?" MASTER CHALK??Any info. would be appreciated.
Regards
Dave
I made an alarmed glass display case for it. Its for sale for $500, case not included.
I hope this is the correct forum. My question is this, what is the big deal with "PRE FLAG?" MASTER CHALK??Any info. would be appreciated.
Regards
Dave
it is the secrect formula before they changed the label and F'd everything up. I have yet to try this pre flag masters that I can remember. I do believe that Masters blue and green are different. I like green better unless you can find the rare african spider monkey pro chalk for $15 dollars a cube. That stuff is the nuts![]()
actually not all pre-flag masters chalk was made before they took the lead out. it was a short time after they changed the formula that they started using the flag on the label.
so you may have pre-flag chalk, but it's possible it's the "new" stuff.
do a search here, there was a very long thread about the stuff awhile back
fatboy, you like the chalk?
They're using less lead now.
They took the lead and mercury out.
The Arizona Department of Health Services has warned that at least two brands of green pool-cue chalk available in Arizona - Master and Pioneer - have been found to contain dangerously high levels of lead. Although infants and children are at greatest risk, chronic lead exposure can cause swelling of brain tissue, fatigue, headaches, irritability and kidney effects. Large exposures can even result in death. The ADHS, in coordination with Samaritan Regional Poison Center, tested 18 brands of billiard chalk at a laboratory in Golden, Colo. after pool cue chalk was found to have played a role in the lead poisoning of a two-year-old Phoenix boy. Master green chalk, made in Chicago, tested as high as 8,000 parts per million of lead, and Pioneer green chalk, made in Taipei, Taiwan, exceeded 7,000 ppm. By comparison, lead-based paint, which was discontinued for use in housing in 1978, has a standard lead content of 5,000 ppm. Cheryl Carpenter, a certified poison information specialist, said 40 micrograms per deciliter of blood is considered a toxic level of lead for an adult. That is twice the toxic level for children. Carpenter said the danger for adults is not substantial and is not an issue for an adult who plays pool occasionally. "I'd be concerned about (people who manufacture the chalk), or pool hall employees dealing with it constantly," she said. Other brands tested in the Samaritan study were found to contain either no lead or very insignificant traces of lead. Those include Imperial and National Tournament brands of green chalk, Superior, Triangle and National Tournament brands of orange chalk and all brands of blue chalk tested.
I ran across this post which mentions lead in billiards chalk. The date on the web page is November 2003, but it doesn't mention the date of manufacture for the chalk. I have been unable to find the original study.