LoReNz said:as the title says... i need a snakewood for the handle of the stick that im ordering.. thanks in advance!!
-lorenzo-
Exactly!!!! Sounds a little fishy if the maker is wanting you to supply the wood. I would never use any customer supplied wood...only my own.Dave38 said:If ordering a custom built cue, wouldn't the builder supply it? Snakewood is not too stable, if he supplies it, he has to fix if any problems arise. If you supply, he may say you supplied a bad piece. in that case, hope your not paying alot for it. Good luck, just my 2.5 cents
Dave
Varney Cues said:Exactly!!!! Sounds a little fishy if the maker is wanting you to supply the wood. I would never use any customer supplied wood...only my own.![]()
desi2960 said:i have made a few cues using cored snakewood for forearms and handles. in the last 5 years every cue has developed cracks. they can be sealed with super glue and refinished without many problems. the double refund cue is one such cue. it got a small hair line crack after 3 years. i would give it a lot of thought, is the look of snakewood worth the possible problems?
rhncue said:Many people don't seem to realize how hard it is to work with Snakewood. It is an extremely hard dense wood and may be the heaviest wood there is at 81 to 83 lbs. cu. ft. It takes 40 or 50 years to dry. When it is purchased it always is completely sealed in wax to keep it from drying out to quickly. I have scraped off the wax and while turning it I could watch the checks appearing in the end grain and the wood I was working with was 25 years old. At shows I look I've looked at many Snakewood pronged cues and in most, if not all of them, there were checks that were filled with black epoxy. A very unique wood but I'm not sure it is worth the headaches that come with it.
Dick
LoReNz said:what do u guys think i should do?