question regarding tone wood, and hit

For a solid, super solid hit, have a 3 piece constructed butt made out of cored phenolic. Cored with either purple heart or rock hard Colorado maple. I have shot with one constructed this way, and it was a hammer. Plus by using this material, it is 99.9% warp proof if built correctly. Good Luck on your search.
 
For a solid, super solid hit, have a 3 piece constructed butt made out of cored phenolic. Cored with either purple heart or rock hard Colorado maple. I have shot with one constructed this way, and it was a hammer. Plus by using this material, it is 99.9% warp proof if built correctly. Good Luck on your search.

Funny you mentioned that .
I just assembled a soon to be my black beauty version.
Old paper phenolic tubes are not easy to find.
My late mentor had one like it as his playing cue.
I'm probably going to add double brass rings and use leather wrap on this one.
White phenolic collars and butt plate ( the maple at the bottom is a sacrificial threaded lock nut ).
 
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The pictures don't do Joey's Black Beauty justice. Who would ever guess that this material could or would be used in a cue. Very different but rich in texture.

Joey did you really have to mention Pernambuco after I finally got it out of my mind? You are really stubborn about getting up off of any of that wood much to my dismay

This is a call to anyone out there that has any Pernambuco. PM me.
 
I really do not understand from a play ability standpoint why more cue makers are not building cues like this. The hit is so crisp, consistent and solid of a cue made from phenolic. If more people had a chance to hit a cue built in this way, you would see a much higher demand and popularity of these cues. Yes, they hit that well. The cue I mentioned was built entirely from phenolic outers and had a purpleheart core.
I for one would like to see your cue in its finished state Joey, please do share when completed.
 
For a solid, super solid hit, have a 3 piece constructed butt made out of cored phenolic. Cored with either purple heart or rock hard Colorado maple. I have shot with one constructed this way, and it was a hammer. Plus by using this material, it is 99.9% warp proof if built correctly. Good Luck on your search.

Colorado Maple????

Kim
 
Colorado Maple????

Kim

AKA big tooth, AKA canyon maple. It's a western version of sugar maple, adapted & evolved to withstand intense drought & high elevation, plus impervious to evergreen acids. It's incredibly slow growing compared to the hard maple we most commonly know, so 20gpi & higher is quite common. The issue with it is finding trees large enough and straight enough to harvest lumber, but they do exist. Even trickier yet is finding a source for it, as it's not a commercially viable species & isn't cut for lumber. Only those in the know, whom have access, the machinery to harvest, mill, and dry, are the people who have it. Believe me when I say it is not easy, cheap, or even monetarily feasible to acquire unless you are able to clear significant profit. The plus side to it is that it often times is quite figured & burled, but again, not so easy to get to. Where it grows is generally extremely difficult & dangerous terrain.
Burl:


Shaft log, straightest I ever seen of the species, and despite the yellowing on end, the lumber was bright white & clear:



There's also rocky mountain maple, which I call mountain box elder. The leaves & growth pattern of the tree closely resemble box elder, but the wood is incredibly hard & heavy, and always caramel or chocolate colored.
The top cue is made from it. I'll take some pics of the raw blanks I have & post them in a bit:
 
AKA big tooth, AKA canyon maple. It's a western version of sugar maple, adapted & evolved to withstand intense drought & high elevation, plus impervious to evergreen acids. It's incredibly slow growing compared to the hard maple we most commonly know, so 20gpi & higher is quite common. The issue with it is finding trees large enough and straight enough to harvest lumber, but they do exist. Even trickier yet is finding a source for it, as it's not a commercially viable species & isn't cut for lumber. Only those in the know, whom have access, the machinery to harvest, mill, and dry, are the people who have it. Believe me when I say it is not easy, cheap, or even monetarily feasible to acquire unless you are able to clear significant profit. The plus side to it is that it often times is quite figured & burled, but again, not so easy to get to. Where it grows is generally extremely difficult & dangerous terrain.
Is there any tree SAFE from you and your chain saw ?:eek::D
 
Blaze maple is soft maple. Never heard of "blaze" maple before, so I did a search & found that it's a hybrid of red and silver maples.
 
Well there's this one cochen rose in Thailand that is being guarded 24/7 by military, but I may have a plan :scratchhead:

I personally know Chuck Norris. He might can help. When trees see Chuck Norris approaching with a chain saw, they just fall over.
 
I was happy to see this combination below. I have had this combo banded together for a while now with that idea minus the stain, I want the ugly to shine through. The Grenadillo is straight from a very well know clarinet manufacturer that I had ties to with a former employer. The Koa has some figure but it is a very heavy dense piece so I held on to it.

Since it's going to be stained black, i'd go for uncored grenadillo front & butt with plain maple or non-figured red/brown koa handle. Very inexpensive & ugly, perfect for staining.

gk.jpg
 
I was happy to see this combination below. I have had this combo banded together for a while now with that idea minus the stain, I want the ugly to shine through. The Grenadillo is straight from a very well know clarinet manufacturer that I had ties to with a former employer. The Koa has some figure but it is a very heavy dense piece so I held on to it.

Nothing ugly about neither that koa nor granadillo.
 
Nothing ugly about neither that koa nor granadillo.

Some granads have yellow/orange streaks with some black and will polish really nice . About 10 yrs ago I bought big slab of figured granad. I'm sure glad I did.
 
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Wood ?

It's not the tree that concerns me :lmao:

Ficus religiosa

Would it be possible to build a cue out of this species? Would also like Douglas Fir in the build if it would work, these are both chosen for personal reasons. If this combo is possible, this is my dream cue. THx, Tom
 
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Ficus religiosa

Would it be possible to build a cue out of this species? Would also like Douglas Fir in the build if it would work, these are both chosen for personal reasons. If this combo is possible, this is my dream cue. THx, Tom

I have no idea where you'd even find the wood.
 
Some granads have yellow/orange streaks with some black and will polish really nice . About 10 yrs ago I bought big slab of figured granad. I'm sure glad I did.

Granadillo is one of the few woods I prefer to not core. Perfect wood for cues, just isn't often aesthetically attractive. Most of the stuff I get is orange & bland.
 
Texas ebony

I love the hit of texas ebony...it doesn't come up very often but the cues that have been made from it...hit's unbelievable.
 
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