Meridian Blades obviously cares about wood. Take a look at his posts. If he chose this piece if wood to have a cue made, you better believe it is an exceptional piece and probably none like it anywhere. That would be the reason he made you sign something saying you would send it back if things went wrong. Obviously things went wrong. Send him his wood back so he can have it repaired, please.
so the general consensus is dont sign your cues then you can put whatever you want on the market and have plausible deniability if a problem arises.
Jesus Christ, man....do you even READ what people are writing about this?
You posted this up in a public venue, making it available for comments. The vast majority have drawn you a road map to get out from under this situation...keeping your integrity and customer base in-tact.
Yet you continue to act butt-hurt over what would have otherwise been a very simple problem to resolve.
YOU HAD AN AGREEMENT TO SEND YOUR CUSTOMER THE CUE HE GAVE YOU SUPPLIES AND MONEY FOR. PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE.
Now, because you're upset that he's demanding you live up to your end of the bargain, you're throwing a temper tantrum.
Grow up...man up...send the customer what was agreed upon...and be DONE with it.
It's just that simple. Seriously.
The longer you drag this out with your whining, the more folks will steer away from any future projects you may complete.
It's not that hard.
so the general consensus is dont sign your cues then you can put whatever you want on the market and have plausible deniability if a problem arises.
so the general consensus is dont sign your cues then you can put whatever you want on the market and have plausible deniability if a problem arises.
I do not care, there will be no further items from me on this site.
from the emails ive received about this cue and the future it will have I surely do not want it out there in the world as it will just fall apart.
That's not your decision to make.
The buyer knows the risk. The buyer is willing to accept that risk. You fully disclosed this information to him and now, its public knowledge.
Stop trying to do the honorable thing because frankly, you're doing it wrong. Send the guy his cue. Period.
i probably would have taken what i offered
1. Free cue after i finish moving
2. Refunding all the money back
3. Multiple sticks of ambonya, thuya, camphor burl to replace the wood as i dont have any koa.
Pretty fair offer or maybe i would have fixed it (after the move) but no he wants it done shiped by tuesday or there will be legal action
But its ok to talk to me like shit and threaten me because hes the buyer and the wood guy on az.
Last offer i send back the 130 i told him not to send minus shipping materials and shipping expense and he gets a rattle and ringwork no shafts.
Actually it is as my property is tied in with his property along with my shop time. So yes I do have a say in what happens to something I make.:grin-square:
Lol at not having enough time to finish the cue. In the amount of time he posted here most cuemakers could of made an entire cue!
To end this just send it to Andy Gilbert and I will pay for the repair. If you need the address I can give it to you.
Why not bandsaw it right through that ring, extract the hardware, and re-do the A-joint?
If that cue came in as a repair job with a noisy A-joint would you turn the job down?
It's a common enough repair.
I can see why someone would not want that wood to get away.
Robin Snyder