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Pool Tables Hartford CT

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Pool Tables. You will find informative articles about Pool Tables, including "Pool Table Care and Maintenance 101". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Hartford, CT that can help answer your questions about Pool Tables.

Dick's Sporting Goods
860-666-3877
Ames Plaza, 2985 Berlin Turnpike
Newington, CT
T & M Billiards & Barstools
(860)257-8332
1904 Silas Deane Hwy, Rt. 99
Rocky Hill, CT
Dick's Sporting Goods
860-648-4044
179 Pavilion Dr.
Manchester, CT
Modell's Sporting Goods
(860) 648-1110
The Plaza at Buckland Hills
Manchester, CT
Dick's Sporting Goods
860-693-1619
The Shoppes at Farmington Valley, 110 Albany Turnpike/ Suite 1109
Canton, CT
Modell's Sporting Goods
(860) 667-1462
3067 Berlin Turnpike
Newington, CT
Sports Authority
(860) 648-9355
241 Buckland Street
Manchester, CT
Sports Authority
(860) 676-8918
1600 Southeast Road
Farmington, CT
Dick's Sporting Goods
860-747-2102
Connecticut Commons, 280 New Britain Avenue
Plainville, CT
Dick's Sporting Goods
860-253-9475
Stateline Plaza, 130 Elm Street
Enfield, CT

Pool Table Care and Maintenance 101

Here are some simple steps you can take - and common, boneheaded moves to avoid - to keep your table in tip-top shape for decades.

By Mason King

YOU JUST screwed up your courage, called the bank and then made a big investment in a pool table - perhaps at the expense of your child's third year in dental school. Or, if the purchase was more modest, perhaps you put off that minor knee surgery.

Before you get too carried away with your new showpiece, you should learn how to keep it in one piece and playing in great shape in perpetuity - or, at least, well past the point where that knee gives out.

It's simple, really. Just study this short list of potentially destructive implements, interlopers and elements and keep them away from the table:

Chalk. Cue tips. Balls. Dogs. Cats. Jewelry. Coins. Heat. Moisture. Your bottom. Frisky neighbors and family members. The sun.

That's right. Sometimes, a pool table's greatest enemies are the game itself and its owners, especially if they forget to treat the table like the piece of fine furniture it is.

Of course, no one wants to keep a pool table locked in a temperature-controlled vault or really large mayonnaise jar. So let's assume that you're reasonably responsible and want to actually play on your new table.

BD asked some of the billiard industry's leading manufacturers, distributors and service providers to spill some maintenance tips you can follow - and a few common-sense warnings you can observe - that will allow you to both enjoy your table and pass it on to future generations.

"Every table will play great at the beginning," says Paul Roberts, a sales rep for Evansville, Ind.-based Escalade Sports. "Ask yourself how long you want it to play like that."

Beware chalk - the silent, insidious killer

There may be nothing that looks cooler than the absent-minded way an ace chalks up between each shot, but the lingering dust is playing a deadly game with your table felt.

"The chalk is abrasive; it gets into the cloth and destroys the cloth," says Dwight Porter, table designer and manager of the high-end Renaissance line for AMF Billiards & Games, based in Bland, Mo.

Brushing the table frequently - even after every session - is a good start, but realize that 50 percent of the chalk dust actually gets brushed into the cloth, Porter warned.

To brush, or not to brush. That's a tricky question, and there are several differing opinions across the industry on how to deal with chalk dust.

Joe Marra of Excel Billiards insists that suction with a small vacuum is the only way to go. Otherwise, you could end up with a layer of dust 1/16th of an inch thick under your felt. Imagine what kind of quirky roll that could give your winning shot on the 8 ball.

But too powerful a vacuum could lift and stretch your fabric. Felice Enright of Gurnee, Ill.-based clothmaker Iwan Simonis Inc. suggests using a brush with soft bristles for daily use. Instead of brushing in circles, be care...

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