snowu
Sitting Out
I want to know the differences and what’s better overall. I bought a sample of greek mold hybrid.
Ceramics with no inlay can have high points in the middle where it's not perfectly flat. So if you try to spin a stack of chips it will spin very easily.Thanks RedDirtBo for the great explanation and illustration.. Forgive the ignorance a chip newbie but can someone explain the term "spinner"? I would guess maybe it means that the inlay spins out of the middle of the chip?
Forgive the ignorance a chip newbie but can someone explain the term "spinner"?
Right!
And here is my explanation of how I think it happens. BRPro (and likely Sunfly) blanks have concave faces so the centers of the chips will never touch. Other ceramics (like Tina no-molds) may have a convex face that bulges in the wrong direction, like this:
View attachment 1578613
Now, when one or more of these convex chips ends up in a stack, one of three things happen.
1. They all face the same direction and "spoon" - no spin.
2. The convex chips are arranged so the concave faces touch - no spin
3. two convex faces touch - Spin!
View attachment 1578614
I truly appreciate how helpful everyone is on here without making new people feel bad for asking, this was an incredibly detailed and thoughtful response.
And here is my explanation of how I think it happens. BRPro (and likely Sunfly) blanks have concave faces so the centers of the chips will never touch. Other ceramics (like Tina no-molds) may have a convex face that bulges in the wrong direction, like this:
View attachment 1578613
Now, when one or more of these convex chips ends up in a stack, one of three things happen.
1. They all face the same direction and "spoon" - no spin.
2. The convex chips are arranged so the concave faces touch - no spin
3. two convex faces touch - Spin!
View attachment 1578614
And sometimes I think one chip just has enough of a bulge in the center so that it’s the only contact with other chips.
PCF: 98% helpful. 2% snark.
I am a 2%’r….PCF: 98% helpful. 2% snark.