Great question. My journey was to review the cue makers forum to determine what makes the best playing cue. I chose ebony forearm, bucote butt, and asked John Davis to make the full splice blank. John sent me 20 samples of splice inserts so I could select the colors for a full splice cue.
I then gave the blank to Alex Brick to complete. He turned it down, finished it and installed a OB Classic shaft. Alex installed my preferred milk dud tip.
By talking to both of these experts and reviewing their advice I now have a cue perfect for me.
Since you like the Brick break cue...this may be a good place to start. Investment $1000 or so.
I have a Brick but with a SS joint. I think it plays great. It's not my first cue by Alex. To be fair, I have to say it's in the running, too.
I think this is a great conversation. Thanks to all who have weighed in.
The Davis finished by Sly is the first cue I've had made for me. It's zebra wood into zebra wood with four veneers: natural, black, natural, black. I've been playing with it as I think I owe it the opportunity. I do like it a lot.
The end result of this may be that I have another cue built...if I can figure what it is I like best about several cues.
A player I know once brought up how fine tuned golf clubs can be. He believes it wouldn't be hard to do something similar with pool cues, but that there isn't enough money in it to warrant the R&D it would take to do it. Maybe someday....
Before I took a long break from the game, I fell in love with a Capone kingwood merry widow. I had a Gulyassy Sledghammer that worked perfectly for me. When I came back after several years, I didn't find the magic in them that I remembered.
So began my journey to find it again. I think we evolve and our strokes evolve. The perfect cue may only be perfect for a limited time period. At the very least, that's a damn good excuse to buy/try new cues. I know for a fact I can't swing the same golf clubs I used to swing.
I also wonder about tip/ferrule combinations and tip choices in general. For example, I have several Barnhart shafts (about six), and one stands out as mentioned previously. I think part of this journey may be trying different tips. I think it's possible that a hard tip may work best on some cues and be awful on others. I can't say that I have a clear preference at the moment.
Again, thanks for the great conversation.