John Ive seen the Furys up close. Theyre not as bad as some of the imprts Ill give you that. Are they perfect. No. But what man made item in this world is!
The biggest problem I have with imports is that they just dont have the life span many American made cues do. I just dont see them being a good buy for someone that wants quality.
Well that's a sticky subject because lifespan also has to take into account what kind of life a cue is subjected to. We just had that major drama thread about a Sugartree cue with a warped butt and I think most would agree that Eric is quite meticulous about how he builds his cues.
Now me, I have always been the kind of person who leaves his cues in the car in all seasons and climates and weather. I have done it with my high end cues and my low end ones.
The thing about "quality" is that it's also hard to pin down. The Chinese cues from the top two makers are now on par with the quality of the cues which are mass produced in the USA. Were they that way five years ago? No they weren't. And they were worse ten years ago. 20 years ago they weren't even fit to be called pool cues.
I have had almost every major brand of cue you can think of. I had Pechauers that I bought in 2001 where all the joints came undone. I have sent Schons and Jacobys back with factory defects - and in all three cases they promptly took care of the cues and fixed everything. In another situation I took in a LOT of cues from a well known small HIGH END cue maker on trade because I had no choice as he could not pay me the $5000 he owed from the cases I fronted him. Another well known and highly regarded cuemaker sat in my hotel room and went through those cues putting little sticky circles next to all the defects in each cue. Every cue looked like it had yellow measles.
Needless to say we didn't even recover $3000 of that $5000 we were owed through selling these cues and this was over $12,000 in retail value.
We all know stories of this cue maker or that cue maker in the USA whose quality is not there, whose cues warp, or whose inlay work needs work. And we don't even need to talk about Meucci.
If you look at quality as a spectrum with the American cuemaker's product at the very top - say that they have taken the construction of wood cues to the highest possible level and with the Chinese cues of 20 year's ago at the bottom then you would have to agree that in order to stay in business and compete the Chinese would need to up their quality while the Americans would need to improve their efficiency. Because it is natural progression for those with low quality to get better through market demand and access to better materials and techniques. And with more cuemakers starting up in the USA it brings down the average quality until the imports and the domestic production reach an equilibrium where they really aren't that far apart.
I think that for every defective import that you see you can figure that there are thousands more that are functioning fine and staying straight after years of play.
When I first went to work for Sterling I *****ed about the quality left and right because I am a stickler for quality. So one night I stayed up all night examining the data about our returns. I looked at the data from every angle and finally had to come to the conclusion that our quality was much better overall than I thought as based on the fact that most returns were not because of defects in the cue. Most were things like wrong weight, don't like the color etc... After that I felt that we had a pretty good quality level and that I could and would be comfortable selling any of our cues to anyone.
And you're right, the Fury cues are not perfect. Bill Stroud of JossWest once told me that there is no such thing as a perfect pool cue. And it's especially true when you are talking about a cue that is a production cue. But the process turns out damn good cues for the money and they do hold up really well for most people who buy them. For some they warp quickly or the rings pop but this happens all the time with domestic cues as well. All of the new McDermotts I owned in the 80s and 90s needed to have the ferrule sanded flush one week after I took it from the bag. Every one of them suffered from swelling ferrules. Almost every Schon I ever owned ended up with air under the finish at the rings and around the inlays.
As an investment for resale down the road you are not going to be happy with an import mass production brand. As the kind of investment where you compare cost of use on a year by year basis then I would argue that today's import cues from the top two Chinese factories offer as much if not more value than a lot of domestic brands. Hope that makes sense.
Gotta go I am breaking my vacation from AZ and I have to make Fury Marketing Posters for the APA tournament in Vegas.
