Sorry can't send a pic as both my scanner and my digital camera are elsewhere. I will however, describe it here as best I can.
This design is a little hard to do if you don't have access to a lathe or a drill press, it can still be done, just makes it much more time consumeing.
What the staff is, is a peice of five foot by 3/4 inch copper tubing, with a peice of two inch by 3/4 inch hardwood dowel held into the ends by screws through the side of the staff. Through the inside of the dowel is a 1/4 inch eye bolt held on each side by a nut, a lock washer, and a reg. washer. The nuts are frozen to the bolt with JB Weld. Then Snap hooks are attached to the eye bolt with an "s" link.
There are two problems with this design that I've found so far. First: if you don't freeze the nuts on the eye bolt, you have to constantly check them because they come loose rather easily, this is why the JB Weld is important. Secondly, having wicks that flail creates a lot more torque wich slows you down a bit, and you have to be careful because the wicks end up in diffirent places then you'd be used to with a regular staff.
On the plus side, It has more torque, making it easier to pull off some of the more technical wraps, palm spins ext.. Changing wicks is completely painless, and the body of the staff doesnt heat up because of all the things in between the body and the wick to diffuse the heat.
I've dropped the staff at least a hundred times and it has not so much as a dent. I think because the ends are plugged, doing that cool air pressure thing that makes it possible to drive a drinking straw through a potato.
I think, soon, I might dissasemble some Nunchucks for the ball bearing swivel, to get a little smoother action on the wick play, but over all this design works really well.
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If you love something, set it on fire.
[This message has been edited by SickpuPpy (edited 17 December 2001).]