How to keep a cue’s shaft
looking and feeling like new.
Burnishing your cue’s shaft helps prevent your cue
from losing its slick finish, but what do you do when it
stops gliding like it used to? There are several ways to
help maintain your cue’s shaft. The easiest and least
invasive way is by simply using a clean, non-abrasive cloth,
such as a Karseal impregnated Cue Cloth.
This will quickly remove most dirt and oil deposited on
your cue, and should be done between games. To remove buildup
on a shaft, or to remove any small nicks or scratches,
special sanding papers can prove useful. Products like Q
Smooth, are micro-burnishing films that clean, smooth
and burnish your shaft. For heavier dirt and chalk stained
ferrules, Q Clean is the best shaft and ferrule
cleaner available.
Often deeper dents in your shaft can also be repaired.
By rubbing a glass or plastic rod over the dent rapidly,
you can, in a sense, bring out the dent. By heating the
cue with such friction, the wood expands. Rather than taking
down the rest of the shaft to match the dent, you are raising
the dent above the shaft, then simply sanding down the
newly formed bump to match the rest of the shaft. |