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  • old school
    replied
    Is that cue with the Blood wood splice made with the " brown ash " shaft ?

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  • danam1
    replied
    Originally Posted by jrc750 View Post
    What happened then ???
    Looks like he "twated one" it to me

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  • j6uk
    replied
    i use a longer thinner weight an i believe it interfered with the cues resonance
    Originally Posted by jrc750 View Post
    What happened then ???

    Leave a comment:


  • j6uk
    replied
    im cutting my own
    Originally Posted by sealer View Post
    do you make the shafts yourself or are you just re splicing ready made ones?

    Leave a comment:


  • jrc750
    replied
    Originally Posted by j6uk View Post
    always good to see some action no matter whos so called thread it is.. i know i dont make the best cue, but id just like to remind the yard what happens to a cue that dont do what i expect it to
    What happened then ???

    Leave a comment:


  • sealer
    replied
    do you make the shafts yourself or are you just re splicing ready made ones?

    Leave a comment:


  • j6uk
    replied
    always good to see some action no matter whos so called thread it is.. i know i dont make the best cue, but id just like to remind the yard what happens to a cue that dont do what i expect it to

    Leave a comment:


  • golferson123
    replied
    mb, as well as being an ex cue maker I am also a cabinet maker business owner, I have dealt with and ordered thousands and thousands of pounds worth of timber and have made it my business to extensively research the properties of different grades of woods and the means of their preparation .I try to refrain from biting at your posts as I find them amusing but you need to realise that there are people on this forum that can see some of your statements are simply made up nonsense, you need to contain your advise to topics you might know a little about, and sadly timber and its usage isn't one of them. ps its spelt veneers not vaneers

    Leave a comment:


  • Ramon
    replied
    Originally Posted by Master Blaster View Post
    Pulp and Paper: Quite! If you're recycled paper lasts 300 years, come talk to me about the beams in my house that are older than your country. You don't supply timber to bespoke furniture makers, you supply to timber frame house builders who are happy to bang summat up in 8wks. Bespoke furniture makers and craftsmen prefer air-dried and that's a fact. Saffa chippies may prefer your dross for their 'projects' but it wouldn't cut the mustard with English Heritage son, not a bit of it.
    you have the right to express your opinion!! It would be nice if you do that in the context of respect!! is true ,what you're saying here is non of my bussines!! just asking this as a fellow Member.
    to get upset only makes it worse.
    try to stay calm and explain your motivation!! that makes it easier for everyone to understand what your intentions are. !! please !!

    Leave a comment:


  • billabong
    replied
    Originally Posted by sanman View Post
    I considered a witty reposte to this post but hey i GIVE UP. Arguing with the VILLAGE IDIOT idioy means I have to lower myself to his level resorting to insulting natioalities and picking on histories of nations. Just for the record I am sorry again for this post and WILL NOT respond to any post by MB in future. Sorry again J^
    I think your post was considered, and well thought out. Didn't deserve the reply it got. No place for that in this forum, IMHO

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  • sanman
    replied
    I considered a witty reposte to this post but hey i GIVE UP. Arguing with the VILLAGE IDIOT means I have to lower myself to his level resorting to insulting natioalities and picking on histories of nations. Just for the record I am sorry again for this post and WILL NOT respond to any post by MB in future. Sorry again J6
    Originally Posted by Master Blaster View Post
    Pulp and Paper: Quite! If you're recycled paper lasts 300 years, come talk to me about the beams in my house that are older than your country. You don't supply timber to bespoke furniture makers, you supply to timber frame house builders who are happy to bang summat up in 8wks. Bespoke furniture makers and craftsmen prefer air-dried and that's a fact. Saffa chippies may prefer your dross for their 'projects' but it wouldn't cut the mustard with English Heritage son, not a bit of it.
    Last edited by sanman; 30 May 2015, 06:45 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Master Blaster
    replied
    Originally Posted by sanman View Post
    MASTER BLASTER. If u know nothing on wood fibre morphology or on theory of drying please stop going on about air dried wood being superior than kiln dried. Wood will always reach equilibrium with environment moisture irrespective of it being kiln or air dried. Also kiln dried timber most certainly is not damaged during drying in a kiln at a cell level. Having worked at a timber mill and having had research conducted by our company in this regards I can say very easily that the claim that air dried wood is superior is rubbish. Again there are some who claim otherwise but years in the pulp and paper environment has taught me otherwise. Each to his own. J6 not to hijack your thread your work is evolving beautifully. Not hear to start an argument. But airdried bit is getting tiresome
    Pulp and Paper: Quite! If you're recycled paper lasts 300 years, come talk to me about the beams in my house that are older than your country. You don't supply timber to bespoke furniture makers, you supply to timber frame house builders who are happy to bang summat up in 8wks. Bespoke furniture makers and craftsmen prefer air-dried and that's a fact. Saffa chippies may prefer your dross for their 'projects' but it wouldn't cut the mustard with English Heritage son, not a bit of it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wayne G
    replied
    Thanks Dean. Over here we'd call it "Heritage" designation.

    Leave a comment:


  • sanman
    replied
    MASTER BLASTER. If u know nothing on wood fibre morphology or on theory of drying please stop going on about air dried wood being superior than kiln dried. Wood will always reach equilibrium with environment moisture irrespective of it being kiln or air dried. Also kiln dried timber most certainly is not damaged during drying in a kiln at a cell level. Having worked at a timber mill and having had research conducted by our company in this regards I can say very easily that the claim that air dried wood is superior is rubbish. Again there are some who claim otherwise but years in the pulp and paper environment has taught me otherwise. Each to his own. J6 not to hijack your thread your work is evolving beautifully. Not hear to start an argument. But airdried bit is getting tiresome
    Originally Posted by Master Blaster View Post
    We're making oak doors for my 18th C grade 1 house this week, and next week and probably for about three months. They have to be hand made from air dried oak, no kiln crap is going on my frames, it wouldn't pass the tests anyway. Takes the best part of a week to make one door and one frame, it's an expensive business, over a grand each we reckon. That's why I admire what you do because I'm using a plane, mallet and chisel and making these 18 C joints so that the replacement doors are identical. It's a lot more work than a cue and the joints are far harder technically than splicing some hardwood with pva onto an ash blank with clamps. But what I like about you, Jawes and TW etc is that you are doing this work yourselves, with planes. Your cue didn't fly in from Bangkok and neither did my doors. Made in Britain, the traditional way by people who care. ;-)

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  • DeanH
    replied
    18th Century = circa 1700-1799
    grade 1 listed house = you cant do much with it (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_...ant_to_listing)



    found this quote
    "Grade I: These are buildings of exceptional special interest, although they are not necessarily the most 'splendid' or prestigious."
    Last edited by DeanH; 30 May 2015, 02:22 PM.

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