The only thing I ever use on my Triangle tip is Master chalk, and I never have a problem. i think the slight abrasiveness of the chalk helps keep the tip surface in good condition. In the past, I used a scuffer and shaper, but they just wore the tips down faster.
Regards,
Dave
Looking at a Triangle tip, it's hard to imagine which animal has a skin that thick and hardIMO traditional tips are made of ground leather mixed with a bonding agent and pressed rather than an actual hide.
Think of a MDF board but made of leather. Then the round tips are cut and the leftovers are ground again and put back into the process, it would make sense.
Julian
How so?Tip maintenance depends on altitude.
At a mile high the leather reacts differently.
So how do they get the blue chalk inside Elkmasters?Single layer tips are not made like MDF board! And yes, it’s a challenge to get that thickness. All Triangle and LePro tips are from Water Buffalo. They are not from ground up leather.
In case you wanted to read up on my Tip Article from 2004 (yeah, I need to update), let me know.
Freddie <~~~ sometimes that thick and dated
So how do they get the blue chalk inside Elkmasters?
Julian
I use only layered tips. I think they're more consistent from tip to tip, more consistent throughout their life (compress less) and they hold their shape better than a 1-piece of similar hardness. And I think they glaze less - I've never noticed a glue layer in many years.layered tips are great on paper but the soft ones are never really soft.
Looking at a Triangle tip, it's hard to imagine which animal has a skin that thick and hardIMO traditional tips are made of ground leather mixed with a bonding agent and pressed rather than an actual hide.
Think of a MDF board but made of leather. Then the round tips are cut and the leftovers are ground again and put back into the process, it would make sense.
Julian
So how do they get the blue chalk inside Elkmasters?
Julian
It's not chalk, the tips are tumbled in Chromium bromide, that's what is causing the blue colour.
Tip maintenance depends on altitude.
At a mile high the leather reacts differently.
I never do anything to my Triangle tips except chalk them.
I do check for proper shape.
How so?
pj <- skeptical
chgo
And how do you shape them - blade, scruffer or sand paper?
Probably not altitude, but rather dryness (low humidity).
Elkmasters is a chromium-tanned leather. It’s tumbled in a drum of Masters Blue Chalk. So the blue internal tinge is from the chromium tanning process. It is not injected with blue chalk.
Maybe you need to read my chalk article?
Freddie <~~~ won’t offer again
The only thing I ever use on my Triangle tip is Master chalk, and I never have a problem. i think the slight abrasiveness of the chalk helps keep the tip surface in good condition. In the past, I used a scuffer and shaper, but they just wore the tips down faster.
Looking at a Triangle tip, it's hard to imagine which animal has a skin that thick and hardIMO traditional tips are made of ground leather mixed with a bonding agent and pressed rather than an actual hide.
Think of a MDF board but made of leather. Then the round tips are cut and the leftovers are ground again and put back into the process, it would make sense.
Julian