will clearcoat stick to brass joint?

BHQ

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or should i use something else? or nothing over brass?
thanks in advance
brent
 
Preface with.."I'm NOT a cuemaker".
Yes you can use laquer or polyurethane clear. The polyurethan will hold up better. The most important factor is that you have the brass ABSOLUTELY CLEAN, no polish residue,no skin oils...NOTHING. ANY contamination and the clear will flake off. You could just go without the clear and use a rag with a dab of Brasso to to keep it shiney.

Terry
 
Tbeaux said:
Preface with.."I'm NOT a cuemaker".
Yes you can use laquer or polyurethane clear. The polyurethan will hold up better. The most important factor is that you have the brass ABSOLUTELY CLEAN, no polish residue,no skin oils...NOTHING. ANY contamination and the clear will flake off. You could just go without the clear and use a rag with a dab of Brasso to to keep it shiney.

Terry

thanks terry. clean with rubbing alcohol i guess? i was concerned about clear sticking to it, because i have it polished smooth and shiny. nothing for clear to "grab" on to?
 
stix4sale said:
thanks terry. clean with rubbing alcohol i guess? i was concerned about clear sticking to it, because i have it polished smooth and shiny. nothing for clear to "grab" on to?

No, I'd avoid rubbing alcohol,it has contaminants, use either denatured alcohol or a wax remover.
I sprayed an old novelty cue I had laying around, first time it didn't hold (contamination),second time around it's still on there but the brass isn't as smooth as the first time either. I was going to try a pre-coat of some stuff that's supposed to allow you to spray aluminum or chrome but decided against it.
I ran a google on "clear coat brass", looks like the commercial way is to use powder coat but they also seem to use the polyurethane.

Terry
 
brass joint

Don't put anything on the brass joint. Treat it the same as you would stainless. Sand the forearm to slightly under the finished size of the brass, remove the brass and finish the cue. Try-fit the brass after the finish is completed. The finish should be built up to the brass and no difference should be felt. No gaps. The brass will patina over time if allowed to do so. Some like it, some don't. The patina process can be avoided by simple cleaning once in a while.

Dave
 
cuebuilder said:
Don't put anything on the brass joint. Treat it the same as you would stainless. Sand the forearm to slightly under the finished size of the brass, remove the brass and finish the cue. Try-fit the brass after the finish is completed. The finish should be built up to the brass and no difference should be felt. No gaps. The brass will patina over time if allowed to do so. Some like it, some don't. The patina process can be avoided by simple cleaning once in a while.

Dave
thank you dave, kinda like the idea of leaving brass alone myself.
send some of that hawaii weather our way!! :)
 
You probably don't want our weather right now. Its been raining for 2 weeks straight. (But nice and warm).
I forgot, on the brass, you can go to a music store or furniture store and get some stuff that prevents the brass from discoloring. Its used on brass instruments to keep them nice and shiny and protected from weather (moisture).
Dave
 
cuebuilder said:
You probably don't want our weather right now. Its been raining for 2 weeks straight. (But nice and warm).
I forgot, on the brass, you can go to a music store or furniture store and get some stuff that prevents the brass from discoloring. Its used on brass instruments to keep them nice and shiny and protected from weather (moisture).
Dave


Speaking of instrument polish, There was a product that a friend Of mine use to like called Winsor polish and tarnish preventive, and It was for copper & Brass. I remember years ago the music store quit carrying It, but he contacted them directly because he was so impressed by It, and ordered a whole case of the stuff. I don't know if they are still in bussiness, I have a bottle here and It has Anawan Associates INC. with a P.O. box number underneath It that's kind of hard to make out. If anyone wants the address PM me and I'll try to make out what is on the bottle as best as I can. No phone # on It, but a good search may bring something up on It.

Greg
 
Tbeaux said:
Preface with.."I'm NOT a cuemaker".
Yes you can use laquer or polyurethane clear. The polyurethan will hold up better. The most important factor is that you have the brass ABSOLUTELY CLEAN, no polish residue,no skin oils...NOTHING. ANY contamination and the clear will flake off. You could just go without the clear and use a rag with a dab of Brasso to to keep it shiney.
Terry

Anyone know what finish DeLorian (sp?) used over his stainless steel auto body?
 
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