I have played with the Revo and I own a few BeCue shafts. Both shafts feel great, ultra smooth but what I noticed is that they both amplify every bit of chalk and dirt you might pick-up from your hands or the table, and therefore require extra wipe downs than when I was playing with wood shafts.
The difference in the BeCue is that because of the aviation paint, I am able to run over the shaft with a burnishing pad, piece of leather, paper and work the shaft like I used to the wood shafts- eventually with time, the finish gets broken in and feels even better.
I don't wear a glove and I play with the BeCue. A little powder on long turns at the table never hurts either. It isn't any different from when I played with Z2, Longoni S2, OB and Samsara shafts in the past.
The Revo comes with specific instructions not to use any abrasives on the shaft, recommending hand wipes to use to clean it.
More the sound you mentioned....acoustics is also important to me and I never did like a hollow sounding hit that I had with some cored out LD wood shafts. I also noticed the sound was amplified when using varying degrees of outside English or longer lengths of bridges.
In my experience with both shafts, the Revo has a higher acoustic range on the hit that is more amplified with a harder tip installed. Whereas the BeCue had a solid low frequency hit with either a medium or hard tip installed.
For comparison here are some videos:
Myself using the BeCue Prime shaft, Kamui black medium tip with a variety of bridge lengths, grips, and degrees of English....
https://youtu.be/fP4D2J19E_Q
Here are some videos where the Revo is tested out of the box with a soft tip, and zero background noise, so you can hear the hit....
https://youtu.be/FTdflfh4GwU
https://youtu.be/igtUqKUciIw
Here at 15:51, I believe Josh Filler had a harder tip installed on the Revo because the sound is a much higher....
https://youtu.be/8bbHVdtNeOI
Hope this helps show the acoustic differences between the two shafts. Again, these are my observations and impressions, nothing beats trying them out yourself. If you make the trek to the super billiards expo, both cues will be on display for you to give them a spin.