W
Walrus
Guest
Once again, I find myself in need of your advice...
Two days after having my brunswick 8 footer covered in Simonis 860, A snag was pulled in the cloth during a mis-break! The snag as I call it is roughly akin to what you might have seen a cat do to your knit sweater. It seems to be limited to a couple of threads, slightly pulled and fuzzed such that a tiny loop sticks up from the bed. The damage is slight, and does not seem severe enough to deflect a balls path unless rolling EXTREMELY slow (even then it was hard to detect under close inspection).
Naturally, I can just ignore it and chock it up to wear-and-tear, but I thought someone from this community might have a suggestion to "repair" or at least minimize the appearance of this condition. It is in the center of the line formed between the first diamonds on the head "breaking" end of the table. I thought about putting a "spot" on the snag and ignoring it, but I'm not sure I would like the looks of that anymore than the snag itself (I do not have a spot on the table to set the rack for appearances sake).
Anybody have any ideas?
Two days after having my brunswick 8 footer covered in Simonis 860, A snag was pulled in the cloth during a mis-break! The snag as I call it is roughly akin to what you might have seen a cat do to your knit sweater. It seems to be limited to a couple of threads, slightly pulled and fuzzed such that a tiny loop sticks up from the bed. The damage is slight, and does not seem severe enough to deflect a balls path unless rolling EXTREMELY slow (even then it was hard to detect under close inspection).
Naturally, I can just ignore it and chock it up to wear-and-tear, but I thought someone from this community might have a suggestion to "repair" or at least minimize the appearance of this condition. It is in the center of the line formed between the first diamonds on the head "breaking" end of the table. I thought about putting a "spot" on the snag and ignoring it, but I'm not sure I would like the looks of that anymore than the snag itself (I do not have a spot on the table to set the rack for appearances sake).
Anybody have any ideas?