At the room I normally play out of, the tables were getting really bad. The owner was going to get some diamonds, but decided to recover the GCIII's that he has instead. No problem there. He has spent a small fortune remodeling the whole room, adding a bar and a restaurant. (still not done after over a year)
The guys come in last night to recover the tables. Up front are two 9' tables that the regular 'players' use. These tables, we were assured, would be fixed right. Most of the other 9's are in the 'back' of the room. Two of those were recovered last night. Today, I spent a whopping $1.50 on one and turned the balls back in. Then I sat down and watched them repair the front two tables.
Recovering the rails- They lay the cloth on the rail, put the featherstrip on, and tap it into place. No stretching of the cloth at all. Then, they turn it over, grap a little cloth between the thumb and first finger, and put a staple in next to their thumb. When done, and the rail installed, you can see exactly where every staple is. And, one end of every rail has more puckers than the other end.
Pockets- When done, they still stick out into the pocket opening. They aren't nailed in at all. So, balls hitting the rubber edge of the pocket rebound out of the hole.
I measured the pockets on the two tables that were done. First pocket- 5 1/2 inches, 2nd- 5 1/4 inches, 3rd- 5 inches. See a problem here??? All us players were told that at least one of the front tables would be double shimmed. Mech. say neither are to be.
Bed- Where the balls rack, there is a divot in the slate. Previous 'mechanic' used wax to fill it in. Which of course, had come out and created ridges around the hole. These guys cleaned out the wax, then prepared to put the new cloth on. I asked them about filling in the hole and was told that you can't. I then explained to them that if you drill a hole there, the bondo or whatever will hold. I was told they aren't going to bother with it!
Some of the slate bolts were missing, and I was told- yeah, these tables are in bad shape. (New bolts not installed) Seams were not filled in all the way, and I was told that the cloth will cover that up. After checking the level of the table, one mechanic came over and asked how that table played. I told him it had some spots that rolled off, but wasn't as bad as the other one. He admitted that there were high and low spots, but he couldn't fix that without leveling the slate and installing shims. And they weren't going to that much trouble.
The wood by each pocket is so chewed out from years and years of staples, that some spots are 1/2" in from the slate. Again, told "yeah, they are pretty bad." No repair done to them.
My problem is, is that I am so disgusted that I don't know if I even want to play there anymore. I realize a lot of people play on crappy tables, but the owner is going to up the price to $9 an hour from $7.75. If the tables were good, no problem. But I have a large mental block about paying an increase for inferior equipment and shoddy workmanship. To me, it is like paying someone to paint my car, and he uses a brush. Hey, it's painted , isn't it?
I am seriously considering boycotting the room, which will cost the owner app. $3,000 a year. Problem is, they have the only 9' tables within 30 miles. Do you guys feel I am over-reacting, or what? The front two tables were supposed to be set up for us 'players', and this is what we get.
signed
DISGUSTED
I would find another room to play in and tell the owner you will be back if he ever gets the tables fixed properly.
The room owner probably got a deal that he couldn't pass up, and of course you get what you pay for. You should recommend a mechanic to fix one table for the players and see what he says. Times are tough all over and he probbably took a lowball price for the work.
Sorry I haven't responded to anyone here yet. I also posted this in the main forum, and it got quite a few responses. The questions asked here, are answered over there.
At the room I normally play out of, the tables were getting really bad. The owner was going to get some diamonds, but decided to recover the GCIII's that he has instead. No problem there. He has spent a small fortune remodeling the whole room, adding a bar and a restaurant. (still not done after over a year)
The guys come in last night to recover the tables. Up front are two 9' tables that the regular 'players' use. These tables, we were assured, would be fixed right. Most of the other 9's are in the 'back' of the room. Two of those were recovered last night. Today, I spent a whopping $1.50 on one and turned the balls back in. Then I sat down and watched them repair the front two tables.
Recovering the rails- They lay the cloth on the rail, put the featherstrip on, and tap it into place. No stretching of the cloth at all. Then, they turn it over, grap a little cloth between the thumb and first finger, and put a staple in next to their thumb. When done, and the rail installed, you can see exactly where every staple is. And, one end of every rail has more puckers than the other end.
Pockets- When done, they still stick out into the pocket opening. They aren't nailed in at all. So, balls hitting the rubber edge of the pocket rebound out of the hole.
I measured the pockets on the two tables that were done. First pocket- 5 1/2 inches, 2nd- 5 1/4 inches, 3rd- 5 inches. See a problem here??? All us players were told that at least one of the front tables would be double shimmed. Mech. say neither are to be.
Bed- Where the balls rack, there is a divot in the slate. Previous 'mechanic' used wax to fill it in. Which of course, had come out and created ridges around the hole. These guys cleaned out the wax, then prepared to put the new cloth on. I asked them about filling in the hole and was told that you can't. I then explained to them that if you drill a hole there, the bondo or whatever will hold. I was told they aren't going to bother with it!
Some of the slate bolts were missing, and I was told- yeah, these tables are in bad shape. (New bolts not installed) Seams were not filled in all the way, and I was told that the cloth will cover that up. After checking the level of the table, one mechanic came over and asked how that table played. I told him it had some spots that rolled off, but wasn't as bad as the other one. He admitted that there were high and low spots, but he couldn't fix that without leveling the slate and installing shims. And they weren't going to that much trouble.
The wood by each pocket is so chewed out from years and years of staples, that some spots are 1/2" in from the slate. Again, told "yeah, they are pretty bad." No repair done to them.
My problem is, is that I am so disgusted that I don't know if I even want to play there anymore. I realize a lot of people play on crappy tables, but the owner is going to up the price to $9 an hour from $7.75. If the tables were good, no problem. But I have a large mental block about paying an increase for inferior equipment and shoddy workmanship. To me, it is like paying someone to paint my car, and he uses a brush. Hey, it's painted , isn't it?
I am seriously considering boycotting the room, which will cost the owner app. $3,000 a year. Problem is, they have the only 9' tables within 30 miles. Do you guys feel I am over-reacting, or what? The front two tables were supposed to be set up for us 'players', and this is what we get.
signed
DISGUSTED