I've had this tool for about a year now and didn't know you can unscrew it for the air tool lol. Yes I'm a knucklehead lol. Thanks a lot for this video!
Hey Jim, thanks for watching and your comment. I'm not familiar with the tool you mention. I'll have to check it out. With the Cuetec tool, you don’t want to use extreme pressure, or you'll wreck any tip. Just light pressure is all that's needed. My shaft you see in the video has a Kamakazi hard tip. My wood shaft has a Kamui soft tip. No problems.
Hello and thanks for watching and your comment! Pick yourself up this tip tool. You'll want to keep your tip in peak performance by using this tool as instructed. What kind of cue did you buy?
@@nvpoolshooter a basic inexpensive cue called Action. I don’t get to play much because there’s NO billiards parlor where I live. I’m in the Bay Area 1/mth and play in Petaluma.
@crazywomancreek1 Inexpensive cues are just fine if they're straight and have a decent tip. Yours probably has a hard tip. Petaluma is not a big town so no surprise there's no pool hall. Santa Rosa maybe? SF would be the closest but that would be a bit of a drive. A bar might be your only local option.
No. I live in Humboldt County and Petaluma has the best, closet billiards hall, which is 230 miles away. There's nothing in Eureka, CA where I live.@@nvpoolshooter
You should clean/blow off any Leather debris off the Scuffer each time to clear each time so you get maximum abrasion. (No Duh). I know you’re showing how you do it. But why not post what is better in this case.
Hey Donnie, thanks for watching and your comment. You really don't have any leather debri buildup inside the scuffer. A bit of chalk, no leather. I've been using my tip tool for about six years, and there's no leather buildup in the scuffer. You're applying just enough pressure, or should, to rough up the tip a bit. If someone is 'sanding' down the tip, then way too much pressure is being applied.