Shark oil for cleaning cue? Please advise.

dooziexx

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Ive seen shark oil before but never really used it. How effective is it in removing chalk and dirt from the shaft? Would anyone recommend using it?
 
oil

dooziexx said:
Ive seen shark oil before but never really used it. How effective is it in removing chalk and dirt from the shaft? Would anyone recommend using it?

Oil will attract dirt, and chalk. I would use a good clean rag, lightly moistened with water, rub it down, and rub hard with dry cloth.
blud
 
dooziexx said:
Ive seen shark oil before but never really used it. How effective is it in removing chalk and dirt from the shaft? Would anyone recommend using it?

Other people have advised shark oil at one time or another. So I tried it a couple of years ago, it was awful IMO. As blud said it attracted chalk dust, but if before that point I just didn't like the glide it produced, the oil seemed to "grap" my flesh.
Maybe I used it wrong, I don't know really.
 
blud said:
Oil will attract dirt, and chalk. I would use a good clean rag, lightly moistened with water, rub it down, and rub hard with dry cloth.
blud
What is it with everybody, what is wrong with good ole lacquer thinner and some wax?

Thanks,

Jon
 
Just an earth-shaking, cue cleaner update. I've been using Blud's method now for several weeks (damp rag, wipe with dry cloth) - the shaft is pristine, and slides like a mother after burnishing (though I do use a glove). I used Soft Scrub about once a week for 2-3 years, and the shaft always felt a little sticky soon after cleaning. I took the shaft in for a new ferrule last week, they measured it and found that the Soft Scrub had reduced the diameter of the shaft - OUCH (now my new shaft does not match the old shaft).
 
I threw away my big bottle of shark oil and now use the ubiquitous compound called dihydrogen oxide. Works great! :p
 
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