I know very little about LD shafts.
This is what I have heard and i could be wrong.
In the mid 80ees production cue companies just couldnt keep up with the deman of good seasoned solid maple shafts and trying to warranty the shafts that were warping.
One of the production cue companies was going broke and didnt pay their maple shaft wood supplier and they got cut off.
at that time the only maple they could get was low grade so the started to glue it together and turning shafts out.
all the other cue companies having problems with shafts warping jumped on the band wagon and now it is hard to find a 125..00 cue with solid maple shaft.
The other part is i dont think pool players realy know what a art it is to pick and produce shafts that stay straight.
Not wanting to upset anyone but i have had a lot of predator and Muecci shafts chucked up in my lathe And i am not impressed with them.
The g core shafts and other production cue makers with all the resin and epoxy in the shafts in my opinion kills the hit of the shaft and the sound and feed back sucks......
I have heard the new tiger shafts play nice And i have a new kevin varney cue in that has one of his Ld shafts on it.
The kevin Vaney cue plays very nice with a lot of ball control.
In a nut shell I get the impression That the Ld shaft came into existence
because solid maple shafts are to expensive to warranty warpage.
plus the fact the cues you have in stock are warping faster than they can be sold
The out come seems to have its positive side of low deflection hit.
Thus making it possible to get more spin being able to do more with CB control.
Learning how to control all the spin plus deflection is where some pool players do really well with this. And other pool players dont and it makes their game inconsistent.
Not to take pool cues back 40 years but one thing i was taught was keep it simple stupid look for the natural path of the cue ball first.
If some one knows the (truth) about who invented and mass produced the first LD shafts and why Ld shafts were invented I would like to Know.
MMike
This is what I have heard and i could be wrong.
In the mid 80ees production cue companies just couldnt keep up with the deman of good seasoned solid maple shafts and trying to warranty the shafts that were warping.
One of the production cue companies was going broke and didnt pay their maple shaft wood supplier and they got cut off.
at that time the only maple they could get was low grade so the started to glue it together and turning shafts out.
all the other cue companies having problems with shafts warping jumped on the band wagon and now it is hard to find a 125..00 cue with solid maple shaft.
The other part is i dont think pool players realy know what a art it is to pick and produce shafts that stay straight.
Not wanting to upset anyone but i have had a lot of predator and Muecci shafts chucked up in my lathe And i am not impressed with them.
The g core shafts and other production cue makers with all the resin and epoxy in the shafts in my opinion kills the hit of the shaft and the sound and feed back sucks......
I have heard the new tiger shafts play nice And i have a new kevin varney cue in that has one of his Ld shafts on it.
The kevin Vaney cue plays very nice with a lot of ball control.
In a nut shell I get the impression That the Ld shaft came into existence
because solid maple shafts are to expensive to warranty warpage.
plus the fact the cues you have in stock are warping faster than they can be sold
The out come seems to have its positive side of low deflection hit.
Thus making it possible to get more spin being able to do more with CB control.
Learning how to control all the spin plus deflection is where some pool players do really well with this. And other pool players dont and it makes their game inconsistent.
Not to take pool cues back 40 years but one thing i was taught was keep it simple stupid look for the natural path of the cue ball first.
If some one knows the (truth) about who invented and mass produced the first LD shafts and why Ld shafts were invented I would like to Know.
MMike