Very interesting. During this years SBE, I spoke at length with the Simonis sales representative. He told me 860HR was discontinued a couple of years ago. What's the story. Did Diamond buy out the remaining stock?
Our pool room is located in the basement of a plaza. Very humid during the summer. They switched from 860 to 860 HR on the GC III's several years ago. The tables did play faster. Two years ago the tables were recovered with 760. Much quicker. This year, the room owner recovered the tables with 860 again. It will be interesting to see how the tables play during the summer:shocked2:.
Lyn
No, Simonis didn't discontinue the 860HR, it's been widely used in Europe for the last 20 years or so, even up today. Diamond had nothing to do with the reintroduction of the 860HR to the US, we (Simonis) decided to play around with it a little bit by changing the shearing (shaving) process and reintroduce the 860HR back into the US market place more as a bar table cloth than anything else. IMO...I hate saying that

it plays with the same speed as normal 860. The main difference between 860 and 860HR is the wool/nylon blend, 860 has 90% wool, 10% nylon, and the 860HR has 70% wool, and 30% nylon. The problem we had before with the 860HR is the same problem with the 760 Simonis I introduced to the Pacific Northwest over 20 years ago, and that's the ball marking cosmetic look of the playing surface of the cloth when it has a 30% blend of nylon. By changing the shaving process of the cloth in the finishing of it, we're not shaving the exposed ends of the fibers as close to the weave of the cloth as is done with the normal 860 finishing process. The reason for this, is because by leaving a little more of the exposed ends of the fiber ends sticking up, you have more of a wool finish protection against the 30% nylon in the weave from showing the ball burnishing normally associated with Simonis cloth. If you had 2 tables side by side, one with normal 860 and the second with 860HR, the only way I can describe the difference between the two, is that the 860HR cloth finish feels harder than the normal 860, whereas it feels more soft or silky.
I like the 860HR in the tour blue for the new cosmetic durability of the cloth, and because the dye of the cloth has been worked out to resist the fading which has been the normal in the past of the tour blue. Now, it's NOT going to fade anymore, which is a great thing, because it's really the best cloth to shoot pool on, as it gives you the best contrast between the cloth and the balls making it easier to see the balls, even if you don't have that great of lighting.
Glen