From your friend and mine.......... Fast Larry.
"CHALK BLUE DIAMOND
We’ve all heard the stories about Blue Diamond Chalk. Some people swear by it, saying it is by far the best pool cue chalk on the market. Other people think it’s just a bunch of marketing hooey and people are paying an insane amount of money for chalk.
Blue master will cost you about 35 cents a cube and they are selling Blue diamond for $4 a cube. So what’s the truth?
The one thing I have learned about pool players is if you are selling something for 25 cents, and you raise the price to 35 cents nobody buys it. But make that same item now $4 and tell everyone it’s much better, and they line up around the block to jump on it.
They tell you that produced with a secret Longoni formula created over 30 years ago and you get it from the Italian Longoni company. The truth is, is comes from Tweeten in Chicago, and it’s sold to Italy from their old American formula created 30 years ago using lead and Mercury.
To uncover some answers, I decided to send an email to the main man over at Tweeten. Considering the fact that Tweeten makes the best chalk in the world, I figured they’d have some insights on the Blue Diamond stuff. Here’s what I asked:
There have been quite a few rumors swirling about Blue Diamond Chalk, including one that has Tweeten as the manufacturer of the chalk. I was wondering if you could dispel some of these rumors:
1. Is Blue Diamond made by Tweeten?
2. If so, does Tweeten use a different chalk blend than what they use in Master Chalk?
I did get some information, but it looks like the mysteries around Blue Diamond will continue. Here’s the response from Skip Nemecek, the President of Tweeten Fibre Co.:
“To answer one of your questions, yes we manufacturer Blue Diamond Chalk for the Norditalia company in Italy. Sorry but I cannot answer the second question.”
This is so typical of them, they keep everything secret, don’t want you to know most of their tips are soft and wear out too fast, and you can never get a straight story out of them. They will even tell you their green and blue formula is the same, which is total BS.
Is it really worth 7 bucks for 2 cubes of chalk? Is it just Master Chalk in a fancy label? Ultimately, I guess it doesn’t matter. People love Blue Diamond chalk, Blue Diamond is made by the best pool cue chalk manufacturer in the world, so it’s no surprise that Blue Diamond is widely considered the best chalk on the market. If you feel like the Blue Diamond chalk makes you a better player, it’s worth spending the dough. Master Chalk I think is better than Silver Cup in my completely worthless opinion. As to what’s in it… your guess is as good as mine. But I think my guess is correct and makes sense.
The rumor I’ve heard about Blue Diamond Chalk is that it’s the old formula for Master Chalk which contained mercury and Lead in it and that the US has laws against manufacturing items that contain mercury and there was concerns about your kids or your dogs and cats eating the chalk that falls on the floor and having brain damage. Italy doesn’t care or isn’t as strict.
I don’t know for sure but it makes sense as Old Master Chalk is better than today’s new Master Chalk. Everyone noticed the difference when Master changed the chalk a few years ago. The new chalk was not as good as the old chalk with the Lead and Mercury. The old chalk adhered and stayed on the tip better. The new chalk Master put out has the American flag on it so you can tell it from the old. Look in Johnny Archer’s bag and he has a dozen old pre flag pieces half worn out he is hanging on to and still using. He will tell you flat out if he finds an old preflag piece in a pool hall he will steal it in a heartbeat.
I am a little more fortunate; I had 3 gross of it when the change took place. I am now down to l l/2 gross so I have a lifetime supply for my personal use. So do I need to pay for Blue Diamond, no, I am using the preflag Master and that apparently is what Blue Diamond is. The old Master chalk formula with lead and mercury. So keep it away from the little kids and pets. Don’t let a piece fall on the floor, because dogs love to chew on chalk.
Why would Tweeten make an entirely new formula and batch just for one small company and production run? They would not. And why sell it only to Italy. Answer, because it’s the old lead mercury formula they can’t directly sell anymore in America? So there is the real truth on this subject that they won’t come clean on?
OK, so you don’t have any of the preflag Masters sitting around anymore.
Then do try out the Blue Diamond Chalk and it does stick better. If it’ll save you from a miscue in a critical match then it’s well worth the $7 IMHO for the 2 pieces. For those kinds of prices, you will learn to not leave the chalk on the table after you shoot and keep it in your pocket. I use the Flag in practice and the preflag in competition and in tourneys or in my shows and exhibitions.
And the preflag I guard with my life. I have my initials on each piece, just in case I do leave a piece on a rail and somebody picks it up. Then they can’t say it’s a house piece.
Check out the green piece from my antique collection, 1930's, it was round, what a cool idea, why did they change, I would guess a block would be cheaper to make? Old pre 50's chalk is very expensive to acquire, a lot of people collect it and what little comes up, too many are after it and they drive the price up. Also at the turn of the 20th century most of the chalk was white, and you can buy white from silver cup today, but I could not imagine where you would use it at?
I show up with my chalk in 3 small bags, each has 4 pieces in it sealed. Bag 1 is my flag chalk I practice with. In competition I use a piece out of bag 2, my 1993 preflag blue, and before they come out of my big box and go into the sealed bag and into my case, I put them on a pie pan and bake them at 400 degrees to insure all the moisture is out of them since they have been sitting around in my pool room for the 16 years. When I have a competitor I take 2 brand new pieces out of bag 3, this is my bait. He sees this brand new chalk and jumps on it and begins using it and ignores his pos piece that is half worn out. These I have soaked with water and soon his draw begins to die and his cue ball control goes to she-yit and he has no idea what happened. Simple, I fooked him. That one simple little trick has taken more out than I can shake a stick at. So control your piece of chalk, I could have just spit in it when you went to the can.
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