I was pretty sure they have been around for quite sometime.androd said:hayden(cotton) lingo was using LePro's in the 1960's

I was pretty sure they have been around for quite sometime.androd said:hayden(cotton) lingo was using LePro's in the 1960's
Yeah Dave has a certain way he can tell if they are good or not. He goes through quite a few to find the ones he likes. I used to play with layered tips but after buying this cue from Dave and using the LePro tip I prefer the LePro.Fatboy said:I play with them too, I have them on a Gus, they are real old. It is tough to find a good one sometimes, but when I do I play with it until its worn down to nothing-takes along time. I have used all the layered tips but perfer LePro's
Jerry Forsyth said:I have always used Le Pro. They were the number one tip in the sixties and they are just what I got comfortable playing with. We did not have durometers so we tested them with a thumbnail to find the good ones. I tried the Moori when All the pro told me it was the nuts but that felt like I had a piece of concrete on the end of my cue, way too hard (and it was a Moori medium).
Now I am told the new Everest tip is the one everyone is gravitating to and so I will try that to see if I can adjust. This because I told Nick Varner last week that I still used Le Pro and he rolled his eyes and said: "Have you hit with an Everest?"
BVal said:Yeah Dave has a certain way he can tell if they are good or not. He goes through quite a few to find the ones he likes. I used to play with layered tips but after buying this cue from Dave and using the LePro tip I prefer the LePro.
BVal
JoeyA said:I'm now playing with an Everest and I give them a big thumbs-up!:thumbup:
Buddy Hall loves a LePro. In the past two years, I also have been compressing some Blue Diamond and Elk Master tips and using them without problems.
JoeyA
JoeyA said:I'm now playing with an Everest and I give them a big thumbs-up!:thumbup:
Buddy Hall loves a LePro. In the past two years, I also have been compressing some Blue Diamond and Elk Master tips and using them without problems.
JoeyA
icem3n said:I prepare my blue diamond before installing, and it play better than layer tip.
I used to like Lepro. Maybe I should try the newer Lepro (like what Manwon said).
...bought my first Leon Sly and on it is the tip I will use for as long as possible. That would be the Everest I think it is the best tip on the market ... Very consistant and it gives you alot of spin and control... Put out by tiger the same people that put out Sniper but to me it is a bit better then Sniper ... ...
I had a conversation with Corey Deuel last year about tips - his was flat as a pancake, there was almost nothing between the chalk and the ferrule. He told me he was still using a LePro.
I had always loved using LePros, but switched to the layered tips many years ago. It had been so long agao, that I forgot why I stopped using them.
:shrug:
I had been unsatisfied with many different layered tips, Kamuii, Moori, etc - so I had a LePro put on and it feels like I have more control.
Like Corey, I feel that the longer the LePro is on there, the better it hits. Corey actually prefers it when the tip gets older and flatter and says that is when it plays best for him. Other than myself, he was the only other person I have ever heard say that.
I do seem to have more miscues with the LePro, but that is probably my fault, not the tip's.
Dave:
Actually, Corey switched to ElkMaster some time ago (probably right after you spoke with him?). He was using ElkMaster at the time this particular "What's in your case?" video interview was done, which was posted in August 2008, although it was probably recorded earlier than that. (If you want to skip forward to Corey talking about the ElkMaster, skip to 2:17 in the video.) He was using ElkMaster this past week/weekend in Valley Forge as well.
I used to love LePro tips, until the cue luthier who I have do all my cue work told me he has to go through literally a WHOLE BOX of LePro tips to find the good ones, so considering the fact he has about a 50% success rate, he tries to steer folks away from LePro since it's a losing proposition (money-wise) for him. Gosh -- talk about a hit-or-miss success rate!
After hearing Efren and Earl talk about ElkMaster, I myself switched to them early last year, and I haven't looked back. I like the "grabby" hit of the soft ElkMaster -- completely opposite to the "piece-of-concrete hit" that Jerry Forsyth describes Mooris give in post #8. (And contrary to popular belief, ElkMasters don't mushroom as much as you think -- even after days of playing "slam-ball" to compress them.)
Anyways, chalk me up as a "former" LePro user, now using ElkMaster.
-Sean