Ronnie Alcano won the World 9ball, and the World 8ball with a Viking cue.
Enough said.
he also got a GIANT F***ING TATTOO of viking cues on his forearm recently. pretty ringing endorsement right there...
Ronnie Alcano won the World 9ball, and the World 8ball with a Viking cue.
Enough said.
What does "pick your cue" mean?If you don't believe in playability can I pick your cue in any important match?
What does "pick your cue" mean?
pj
chgo
I'd love to know which 8 you're interested in.My first quality cue was an 80's Viking. I was a beginner at the time, but I was happy with it. The local hot shot tried it and said it was a good cue and the only one I'd ever need.
By the early 2000's, Viking had only a couple of models that I didn't think were hideous. When I saw them at my first SBE, I thought they looked even cheaper in person. The current series looks much better, with about eight models vying to be my next cue. I'd also like to get one of the old three-pointers with the Viking logo under the clear butt sleeve ring.
Who is Anthony "Two Feathers"?...Definitely not Gus Szamboti or Jerry Franklin or Dennis Searing,so why would I buy a cue designed by Tony "Two Feathers"
These are beautiful, thank you for sharing.I have 2 Vikings from about 20 years apart. A Q1 and a B400. Your right about the big butt on the earlier cues but most of the cues back then were like that. It plays great but takes some getting used to. The Q1 was made in 98 and is an extremely sweet cue. I'm proud to own both. Here's a couple pictures.
its on the first page johnNo one mentioned the baddest sneaky pete on earth that Viking made...
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I don't know if it's intentional but the product shots on the Viking website are horrible.
http://shop.vikingcue.com/cues-699-...age=flypage.tpl&product_id=434&category_id=54
Anyway Viking has always been a leader in this industry, from innovative construction, to dozens of options, to sponsorship, innovative advertising and wickedly cool cues.
I actually find it to be really sad that small cue makers get tons of praise for doing things now that Viking did decades ago and which they continue to now. It seems that often a company attains a certain size then the cool stuff they do isn't "cool" anymore for some reason. But if people were really fair they would look at the designs Viking has done and give them a lot of credit for coming up with some amazing designs and figuring out how to execute them.
People forget or just don't know that Viking has been around since the 60s. Since 1965. The same time that Balabushka and Szamboti and Ginacue were getting going Viking was right there with them.
50 years of cue making counts for something.
its on the first page john![]()
No one mentioned the baddest sneaky pete on earth that Viking made...
![]()
I don't know if it's intentional but the product shots on the Viking website are horrible.
http://shop.vikingcue.com/cues-699-...age=flypage.tpl&product_id=434&category_id=54
Anyway Viking has always been a leader in this industry, from innovative construction, to dozens of options, to sponsorship, innovative advertising and wickedly cool cues.
I actually find it to be really sad that small cue makers get tons of praise for doing things now that Viking did decades ago and which they continue to now. It seems that often a company attains a certain size then the cool stuff they do isn't "cool" anymore for some reason. But if people were really fair they would look at the designs Viking has done and give them a lot of credit for coming up with some amazing designs and figuring out how to execute them.
People forget or just don't know that Viking has been around since the 60s. Since 1965. The same time that Balabushka and Szamboti and Ginacue were getting going Viking was right there with them.
50 years of cue making counts for something.
i suppose its a normal fullsplice (just shorter) untill the points make the turn. afterwards its good woodchoice (no color differences) to finish the points with inlays.
i SUPPOSE its done like this