No, it's pure BS.
No sealer will do what I joked about.
:thumbup2:
:smile2:
No, it's pure BS.
No sealer will do what I joked about.
One of the finest sealers is skin oil/fat. Think about it, ultimately that's what's going on it anyhow. I believe the first to tell me were the Franklins.....my 21-year-old curly maple Southwest shaft consists entirely of a combination of skin oil and chalk. The trick is not to put anything else on a shaft, and not to clean it aggressively, nor sand it,[/i]
Hi,
I wonder what percentage of CMs use Nelsonite or Resolute?
Maybe a poll would be interesting.
Rick
Is it true that a shaft plays livelier when any form of sealant or wax isn't on the shaft? What is the use of sealant and wax besides keeping the shaft clean and reduced bluing?
I know this question sounds silly bit there's an ongoing debate in a Chinese forum and I started a thread there. There's a habit here in this part of the world where they "open" the shafts by sanding or removing the top layer of the shaft on a lathe claiming the cue plays much livelier.
I personally don't believe it's true especially if it's not paint finishing on the full shaft but just wax or sealant. However I would like expert opinions especially from cuemakers on this.
Thanks in advance for all valuable inputs!
Jive, good Q if you take off the top coat using fine sandpaper the shaft would get smaller and get livelier, the player may not know it but can turn down shaft from 13 mm to 12.5 in 6 months. I have seen this many times, if people do it in a drill it can happen fast.. If you don't sand much use 2000 grit and use clear carnauba wax, your shaft may last as much as 30 years longer, that would pay off better. If you want to take a little off the shaft, get it where you want than start using the carnauba. 30 years is long time most snooker players play with one cue only, maybe even their whole career unless one gets lost are broken. Snooker on a 12 foot is tough game, they want one cue because they know the cue from a young age, it would be hard for a snooker player to play well with 10 or 20 shafts or 5 or 10 cues. Jeff
Thanks for your input Jeff.