Well, I think your question is best asked of Schon - we are cuemakers of our own cues, not cue dealers for Schon.
However, that said, changing out a weight bolt is a 5 minute task and is a common maintenance operation to bring the weight of a cue to a customer's satisfaction.
1/2 oz of weight in the butt of the cue is not going to drastically affect the weight distribution of that cue.
My 2 cents,
Gary
Hey Gary,
Regardless if the question is about a Schon Cue, I don't really think that this question is specific to Schon Cues as I'm also not convinced that removing the bolt is a trivial or maintenance thing to do.
Correct me if I'm wrong but if the Cue already has the weight distribution to the front, wouldn't removing the 0.5oz bolt automatically mean that the weight will shift even more to the front, thus, affecting weight distribution?
As far as I understand, the weight bolt is there for a reason and also, the mechanics of the Cue were built having the weight bolt in mind. In my mind, the whole alignment of the Cue should be done with the weight bolt on, am I wrong? Otherwise it makes no sense, does it?
So to me the question still remains. Regardless if it is a Schon Cue or whatever, what is the proper/correct thing to do? Order one from the Cue maker to the specifications of the Customer or remove/alter the weight bolt and send it over to the Customer?
May I add that since you have not yet played with the cue and are not familiar with it'd prior balance, you won't know if there is a difference.
It is not something you should be concerned over. It's an off the rack cue, not a custom built cue.
I started this thread because I've been burned in the past and I just want to make sure what the official procedure is, so as to know what to do if I order a Cue from a retailer and the retailer does not deliver what I asked for.
Roughly 8 years ago, I ordered a $700USD Cue from a very respectable online shop in the US. I ordered a 19oz Cue. They sent me a Cue that had a sticker for 19oz, but if you hold in, you'd swear it was over 20oz.
I used to have the exact same (19oz) Cue from 1993 to 2002. The Cue I had was perfect in every way. The weight distribution was 101% perfect for me (it was just a tiny bit to the front) and unless you put it on an electronic scale, you'd swear that the Cue felt like it was 18oz, no more than that. It just played like a dream!
Back to the "19oz" Cue I ordered; the weight distribution was "funny". I couldn't make out the weight distribution. Was it to the rear? Was it to the front? It seemed to be towards the rear but depending on where I was holding the Cue, it also felt as if the weight was towards the front. Then, while holding the Cue and trying to balance it on one finger near the linen wrap, the Cue would suddenly shift the weight to the front or rear, without being able to balance properly (I haven't worked at a circus but I am able to find the balance point on a Cue).
I decided to take the Cue to a Cuemaker and repairman here in Greece, so as to put it on an electronic scale. It turned out that the Cue had a sticker of 19oz, but it was actually a 20oz Cue. Also, the weight distribution was indeed to the rear-end of the Cue and not to the middle or front. The weight bolt inside it was a cut-in-half 1oz bolt (so it was a 0.5oz weight bolt).
So, according to what I saw, the Cue I ordered was originally a 20.5oz Cue and the retailer cut the weight bolt in the middle and brought it down to 20oz. We put a new 1oz weight bolt in the Cue and all of a sudden, weight distribution shifted exactly to the middle.
The Cue was still a bit too heavy for me, so I decided to modify the Cue, remove the bolt totally and bring it down to 19.5oz. Still, the Cue I'm playing with it just not the Cue I used to play with and definitely not what I ordered.
For the sake of clarification, the Cue I bought was
NOT a Schon Cue!
This is why I'm asking this question; to find out what the official procedure is and what a retailer is supposed to do!
Being an engineer myself (in Computer Science), I strongly believe that when you're building something and if you're trying to build something perfect, everything you put into something you build is there for a reason.
And from that perspective, I'm really interested to find out what Cuemakers think regarding the weight distribution and what a retailer should do in a situation like the one I'm describing.