:: What's the Best Portable Tip Tool? ::

+1 for this. Shaper, scuffer, trimmer, tapper and burnisher all in one tool.

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I have the Ultimate but was warned by a cue maker that using it for burnishing it could actually pull the tip off. I've never had that happen but since I'm now aware of it, I'm a bit more cautious with it than I used to be. Usually, for burnishing, I use pieces of paper cover book covers from my days in the bindery.
I'v held it between my feet to shape a tip and never had it gloss it over, either.
I also have a an original Brad that I've had even longer. I also have a tip p*r*i*c*k, now that I think about it;) Hard to believe that word is censored. LOL!
 
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Thanks!!!

I appreciate all the great comments.

I do ship overseas, I just had a recent problem with China and don't want to repeat but Jive worked that out.

To date, the Last4Ever Tip Tools are in use throughout the US as well as:

Australia
Canada
Croatia
England
Greece
Kuwait
New Zealand
Norway
Poland
Singapore
Switzerland
Taiwan
Vietnam

A pretty amazing testimony on AZB's worldwide reach since I do very little advertising.
 
I appreciate all the great comments.



I do ship overseas, I just had a recent problem with China and don't want to repeat but Jive worked that out.



To date, the Last4Ever Tip Tools are in use throughout the US as well as:



Australia

Canada

Croatia

England

Greece

Kuwait

New Zealand

Norway

Poland

Singapore

Switzerland

Taiwan

Vietnam



A pretty amazing testimony on AZB's worldwide reach since I do very little advertising.


I'm glad we got that out of the way cos by the number of recommendations it seems silly of me not to try your tip tool.

In anycase if there's anything I can help out from this side of the pond feel free to drop me an email :)
 

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I would recommend the Willard's for shaping. I've been using it for years. It hasn't come close to wearing out and is the right radius for me. I usually only have to shape 1 to 3 times in the life of a tip. One time if the installer didn't get it right. Second time, after a while of play I reshape to take care of any inconsistent spots. A third time if it is needed, though usually not. As far as scuffing with it, it used to work well when I've used it for that, although scuffing in general removes too much tip and greatly reduces the life of the tip.

For creating a rough surface to hold chalk, I absolutely and unequivocally recommend a gator grip. I personally bought the well overpriced Kamui, but the performance made me forget that. There are what look to be equal alternatives for a fraction of the price, and if I ever lost this one I would probably replace it with a lower priced model. As far as performance this type of tool is hands down the best, imho. It quickly produces a very rough feeling, non damaged surface to the tip. My tips have been lasting over a year of heavy play and frequent roughening without losing so much as a layer of tip (believe me, I've counted). The only reason they need to be replaced is they become too compressed. Using a scuffer, I was going through two to three tips a year and having to make the choice between the playability of a roughened tip or preserving the life of an expensive tip. Now I roughen it up whenever I need without any real consequence to the life of the tip.

Hope that helps,
Eric
 
look up the morakamui tip tool, just type is gator tip tool on ebay. Its the same think at Kamui hat or grip but a lot cheaper… $35.00 VS. 14.00 lol
 
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