I recently went into a couple different billiard stores looking at pool tables. I want something that plays good and my wife wants something that looks good. She's ruled out gold crowns and diamonds. So I'm stuck looking at 'other' tables. I quickly learned that I know next to nothing about pool tables. I know that I want Simonis 860, and 4.5 inch pockets with slate at least an inch thick but thats about all I guess. The sales people start going off about Brazilian slate and that it is one step below Italian slate but won't make a difference in how the balls roll or its constructed of all African hardwood or some crap. I just nod my head like a chick talking to a auto mechanic. I've learned to look under the tables and sure table A has more bracing than table B. But are there some guidelines to go by?
One salesperson told me Olhausen is all but Bankrupt, and Brunswick (I think) sold a part of there company to some shuffleboard company. Should this be a concern? I don't want to have issues in the future obtaining parts.
What else do I need to know before I drop 5 grand on a table?
All I can tell you about furniture pool tables...is that I stay away from them as much as I can. I don't really care for the construction of the frames, the design of the pockets, or for the rail design for that matter either. They all use the #6 pocket irons for the most part, most all have either MDF or particle board for the slate liner that the cloth is stapled to, which won't last with repeated recovering of the table. I don't care to much for antiques either, they're really out dated and cost a bundle if you want to fix one up to play more modern like, and in a lot of cases even that won't help. None of the furniture tables carry much of a resale value what-so-ever, so I consider them to be pretty much a waste of money. The day someone designs and builds a furniture table to play like a Diamond or Gold Crown...is the day I'd change my mind about a furniture tables.
Glen