SOLD 600 used jack Cincy 1 (some milled) (1 Viewer)

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Well yes, I can read.....
I mean I want to SEE the difference.
When I looked at the photo, it seemed that there was still a little glue residue present, so that's why I thought they might just be murdered. I've never milled a labeled chip before, only hot stamps. So those have a very uniform look after they have been milled. I had assumed that when milling off a label, you might also remove some of the clay, and the chip would look similar to a milled hot stamp. But with Josh's extreme level of talent & skill, I imagine that he can remove the label while taking off little if any clay.

Does that give you sort of a visual?
 
When I looked at the photo, it seemed that there was still a little glue residue present, so that's why I thought they might just be murdered. I've never milled a labeled chip before, only hot stamps. So those have a very uniform look after they have been milled. I had assumed that when milling off a label, you might also remove some of the clay, and the chip would look similar to a milled hot stamp. But with Josh's extreme level of talent & skill, I imagine that he can remove the label while taking off little if any clay.

Does that give you sort of a visual?
Yes. No longer turned on. Thanks.
 
I'm coming to the conclusion (and please, it's just from the milling I've done. Zero actual research) that the newer the chip, the more successful in milling as Alt for murder will be.

The older ones have thicker laminate that loves to melt, and the glue actually will rip out clay rather then break.
I obviously have no where near as much experience at milling as @Josh Kifer but I found the same thing when I did my set. Older chips with paper inlays were absolutely a pain in the ass to mill!!! The Cleveland Horseshoe snappers and Star ship chips popped at almost instantly as soon as the bit touched it. If I ever do another set I will make sure all of the chips are newer.
 
I obviously have no where near as much experience at milling as @Josh Kifer but I found the same thing when I did my set. Older chips with paper inlays were absolutely a pain in the ass to mill!!! The Cleveland Horseshoe snappers and Star ship chips popped at almost instantly as soon as the bit touched it. If I ever do another set I will make sure all of the chips are newer.
Same experience. Older love to melt into the bit, melt into the clay, and generally make each chip it's own little project.

I.e. No thanks.
 
I'm abandoning my THC project for the time being, so time to clear out some space (aka recoup some cost).

200 used,milled, and cleaned
300 used, pretty clean
70 a little dirty, typical casino used
30 mint (when I ordered used from the sale, got lucky with some mint chips peppered in)

$550 for all of them, shipping included (CONUS only).

Willing to split, but priority goes to the person taking them all.

Sorry for the url pic, but apparently my photo is too large

https://i.ibb.co/f4X1Yxn/20220210-182401.jpg

Disclaimers/rules...
  • I only ship to CONUS
  • PayPal only, FF preferred, GS you pay fee
  • Post dibs then message me
  • Payment due within 24 hours once I confirm they are yours
  • I reserve the right to not sell based on someone's negative rating (or lack there of rating)

thanks!
Get your 65gb pic under control
 
Well yes, I can read.....
I mean I want to SEE the difference.
I can post pics tomorrow of these exact chips murdered by knife. The knife method will result in a cleaner result and there will be no chance of any sort of double edge or bits of vinyl left.

In my opinion, if a chip has an insert, a better result will come from murder by knife. If a chip is hot stamped then milling with either a drill press or a router is the way to go.
 
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