Is there anyone who sells good ones on the forum ...
Is there anyone who sells good ones on the forum ...
I thought triangle tips were "hard". Why would you want them pressed?
Same here. Someone report on how they play once pressed please. Sounds like a break tip to me.
Cueman, what is the difference between single and double pressed?
Could you use other tips for a comparison, pls.
Years ago I had a cue repair man put on new tips on both of the shafts on my Scruggs cue. He encouraged me to let him put on pressed Triangle tips with the incentive that they shouldn't ever mushroom. Sure enough I played every day for two years with those tips, alternating shafts to keep the wear even, and they never did mushroom. They got used anywhere between 2 and 8 hours a day. They were easy to maintain and they didn't seem to get much harder as they aged.
There is currently a problem with the quality control on the Triangle tips and there has been for some years now. Many of the tips coming out of the box are what I'll call mushy and even after pressing they provide a soft feeling hit and they seem to break down much faster than the good tips. There is a discussion about this in the cue maker's forum. Apparently Tweeten is aware of the problem and they are working to rectify it. Until then the method that some use to determine the tips worth using is to place them in a container of water. If they sink they are the good ones, if they float you should discard them.
Triangle tips are actually medium hard.
I like a pressed Triangle single layer tip.
I have four shafts that are exactly the same, diameter, length
of taper, hard pressed triangles.
I rotate them.
Play the same shaft every fourth session.
Hard pressed Triangles don't need much maintenance but when shaping them
you never have to worry about a layer coming off.
They do not need replacing often.
They rarely mushroom.
They are about a buck apiece.
Yeah, I'm old school.
Keep it simple stupid.
Maple shafts.
A lights out player can take a stick off the wall
and beat everyone in the room.
I love Triangle tips but they have become a hit or miss tip. I had some done like a milk dud and they are still hit or miss. The biggest problem is trying to use the entire hyde instead of the consistent part of the hyde. The triangles on the right side of the picture turn to a sponge when you start working it.
View attachment 548844
View attachment 548845
The new ones I just got look like the ones on the left. Nice grey/blue color instead of the brownish. Hopefully they will be like this from now on.
I love Triangle tips but they have become a hit or miss tip. I had some done like a milk dud and they are still hit or miss. The biggest problem is trying to use the entire hyde instead of the consistent part of the hyde. The triangles on the right side of the picture turn to a sponge when you start working it.
Michael how do these look to you:
Group 1...From Seyberts 2 months ago
![]()
Group 2 From Seyberts 2 years ago
![]()
Philly,
I too prefer single layer tips. I switched to dawg duds a few years ago. I was asking because I have only heard of pressing triangles from perhaps three people until now. Obviously, the elk masters have always been the go-tos for duds because they play so much better after being pressed. I have heard members speak highly of pressed lepros too, but others have had bad luck with them.
The dawg duds typically mushroom on me once, after maybe 50-100 hrs of play. Once trimmed they seem consistent to the end.
Are you still selling these tips? Thank youI sell them. If you want them double pressed let me know and the are an extra $1 each. 10 tips for $22 plus shipping.
I sold some last year and pressed them when this thread was new. But I feel it is a waste of money to pay me a dollar a piece to press your tips when it is easy to do yourself.Are you still selling these tips? Thank you
Could you suggest a good brand or maker for a tip press? Thank youI sold some last year and pressed them when this thread was new. But I feel it is a waste of money to pay me a dollar a piece to press your tips when it is easy to do yourself.