yes, I did search the interwebs.
Didn't find anything though. Thus me asking you guys.
It's a 58" cue. Pool cue, not snooker. 14mm tip.
Not missing a section.
Snooker cues come to mind, because it is not a 1:1 split. Snooker cues are built that way. Snooker cues also are around 58-60" long. A 14mm tip is definitely not for snooker, though.
I can only imagine that Adam try to build a pool cue with influence from snooker cues.
I googled "buffalo snooker cue" and found this
https://www.cuepower.co.uk/buffalo-m-19.html
Obviously you didn't search hard enough, because I did this on my first try.
My guess is "Buffalo" is a cheap brand from the UK and your cue is a pool cue made with a 3/4 joint like a snooker cue.
We'll, i DID find a lot of buffalo snooker cues, but since that doesn't have anything to do with this cue I counted it as a failed search.
What I meant was that it haven't found any info about buffalo 3/4 pool cues from the 90-s looking like mine.
Price new was 1500 dollars.
You bought a cue for $1500 that you never knew a thing about? Or did someone tell you it was $1500 new?
I bought it new in the 90's, and i paid 1500 bucks.
Pool in Sweden was non existant back then, nobody knew anything about cues. In retrospect, I probably trusted the seller a teeny tiny bit to much, but I was 23 and had a lot of dough. Seemed like the right thing to do back then.![]()
Well I found a catalog of the company. Their website is www.billiard-products.com.
I'm going to guess and say they are similar to cuestix international, with brands like Lucasi, Players, and Action.
Billiard Products has brands: Universal, Adam, Buffalo, Cuetec, Maxton, and Stinger.
I bought it new in the 90's, and i paid 1500 bucks.
Rule 3: Don't lie about what you really paid for the cue
Wow, interesting indeed. 14mm and built this way, I have never seen a cue like that! Buffalo brand cues are still being sold, they are made by Adam. The only pool cues I can find online are normal 50/50 split cues and are quite cheap as well. They cost around 250 bucks, and are usually conventional in design. My first cue was a Buffalo no. 1 and a buffalo jump cue. I still have the jumpcue and I wish I had kept the no.1 as well, for sentimental reasons. When I put a predator shaft on it, it played quite nice. Nothing special though.