I've got a dirty predator ferrule. What's the best way to clean it?
ToughRowToHoe said:I've got a dirty predator ferrule. What's the best way to clean it?
buddha162 said:Mr. Clean Magic Erasers. End of shaft/ferrule cleaners, end of story.
(okay, here's how: wet the sponge, then wring it dry. Lay it between paper towels and really squeeze it dry. "Erase" chalk, sweat, oils, grime from your shaft and ferrule, one section at a time. Clean gritty residue with 92% alcohol, and burnish with an untreated leather pad. Marvel at the brand new shaft now in your hands....)
-Roger
ToughRowToHoe said:I've got a dirty predator ferrule. What's the best way to clean it?
Careful with that stuff. Acetone is not a really "hot" solvent, but it might rough up your ferrule or loosen the glue holding your ferrule or tip. I wouldn't put fingernail polish remover (acetone) on a cue I cared about, but that's just me.wizard said:One other thing that works too is fingernail polish remover![]()
buddha162 said:Alright that's it.
First of all, Mr. Clean's Magic Eraser is a general cleaner, found in supermarkets/drugstores everywhere. It cleans mechanically, by forcing microscopic fibers into the wood pores and lifting dirt out: no chemicals, and most importantly, not abrasive!!!
The application for cleaning cue shafts/ferrules was discovered by a man named Tommy over at CCB, and since then everyone who used it swears by the product. Everything else mentioned are variations of the same thing: MCME's are not!
-Roger