I agree 100% with Dave here. I think the people in this thread know perfectly well what is up here, but there are some who decide they are going to cross the line and try and force their opinions on others and that is wrong.
There is no doubt a cue maker should be honest and do business ethically, and misrepresentation is interpreted differently among different people. Either way you slice it, lying is never good.
There is a finer line here that is being illuminated and that is when is it necessary to say what goes in your cue, and to whom?
There are lots of reasons people do things, and as I have already expressed, it normally doesn't matter unless you have someone who is knowledgeable enough to know the difference and they really want to know. For someone like me who is just starting out, I have no choice but to use blanks, but as my skills progress, I plan on making my own, but that's my personal business practice. It kind of like a chef who could care less to explain what he put in his food. Yes, the customer has a right to know, but damn! Come on. Get real here. If I ain't gonna list all those ingredients and my suppliers on the menu.
I agree that the higher end cues from master cue makers should be constructed as much as possible from scratch, but there are reasons a les experienced cue maker doesn't, and if you have nothing to do with that cue maker, you really don't have a right to tell that cue maker what's up.
The last cue I made was a not from a blank I made. If I were to sell that cue, I would not list the maker of that blank unless the prospect really needed to know, then I would disclose that info. Is that dishonest? Not in my book. That is how many a cue maker makes and sells cues and has done so for years.
When it comes to certain things, there is a line you do not cross and that is to tell a cue maker how to run his shop especially if you don't make cues. It's that simple. You don't tell a soccer coach how to coach his team, you don't tell a chef how to cook your food, and you don't tell a cue maker how to make and sell his cues. If you are dealing with an individual cue maker who is making you a cue, you have every right to know anything you want to know about that cue, but that's only if you have the knowledge to back those questions up. If you are like most who don't have a clue and don't care one wood from the next than you shouldn't even worry about it in the first place.
If someone outright lies and claims he made a blank when in fact he didn't, that is wrong, and we all know that. If you have to ask that question in the first place, or prove that to the world, you need to ask yourself what is wrong with your judgement.
Those who have respect show it. Those who have knowledge demonstrate it. Those who have no class and twist what other people say or dictate how a craftsman practices his craft need to get a life.
why is the car analogy a bad one? would nike be a better one. when you buy a nike driver for 400$ do you ask did you make this head, shaft or grip... no.
this buisness just about the only one in the world where the customer thinks he has the right to know everything. i dont agree with this. before they call it just a "trade secret"
anyone that has done any buisness with me knows i am about as hands on as possible. i want everyone to be happy. however if you know nothing about cuemaking what purpose do you gain from this knowledge? its its quality it shouldnt matter. the cue has my taper and my specs. do you ask where i bought the wood or metal rings joints screws. i dont make my own phenolic or delrin but i machine it. is this ok?
the problem now is customers have access it suppliers ect today so they have much more knowledge then before. does this give them the right to know "everything" no. i could be wrong but... if i am show me where its written.
i suppose this is why certin makers dont talk to people. not bc they are being deceptive but the customers sometimes are into things they dont need to be
so... finally tell me this. you spend 9500$ on a gus over say 6500$ on a barry. u want the gus bc its a gus... its the dad... hes the master. do you think gus told the world that barry made the forearms in alot of gus's cues. does this change your mond about the gus?
the answer is no
so heres my breakdown
wood bell forrest
joint atlas
pin atlas
phenolic atlas
rings prather/atlas
veneers dustin cookson
wrap atlas
leather tiger brianna hightower
tips atlas
ferrule atlas
delrin atlas