Hi guys and gals , I'm thinking of getting a schuler cue and wanted some opinions on the feel(soft hard ) hit. where you rate it in a deflection against other cues ? And with the unique joint can it take a predator or OB shaft. thanks
Hi guys and gals , I'm thinking of getting a schuler cue and wanted some opinions on the feel(soft hard ) hit. where you rate it in a deflection against other cues ? And with the unique joint can it take a predator or OB shaft. thanks
i recommend you find one to play with before you buy.
They are often at shows and events and you could hit some balls with one.
Jmo.
I have never been a fan of them, but never hit a ball with one. I have looked them over, but they just weren't my cup of tea.
The joint always looked hokey to me. But again, coming from a guy that never hit a ball with one, that isn't a fair response.
I would think you could have someone make a shaft to match the joint. It may not be produced by them, but some cuemaker would make it from a blank.
Best of rolls,
ken
I've had horrible experiences with the SLC line. The finish on all of them were just awful.I'd advise against here. Here is why;
Older Schulers (pre 2002) Most were not even built by Ray but one of his many cue makers, and though he had a few good ones, he had a couple very bad ones. Plus, Ray was not a stickler in "humidity controlled" workshop, nor aging wood properly, or even keeping the place clean. If you can find one made by Ray or even by Mr. Lee, I'd say jump on it, but there is no way to document who made what, and when. Sorry Schuler fans, just a few facts, I know some folks won't like to hear this.
And yeah, I got stuck with a couple of clunkers, and they will warp, just a matter of time.
After his death in 2002, with the SLC cues, the shop was now fully run by the new owners who had a stake in the place before his death, and two folks who had no reason to be in the cue making operation, not only based on lack of design, but lack of knowledge in general of woodworking, no business saavy and worse yet, quality control. Just terrible to be blunt.
Then, as "they" slowly and methodically ran down the remaining vestiges of Ray's credibilty , they had to close their "new" custom 3,000 sf shop, (they dreamed big, I'll give them that) and hand off the cue making operations over to Jacoby Cues to produce their SLC line of cues.
So, in essence, schuler cues only exist in name only, they do NOT make cues. Of course, since Jacoby makes a fine prodcuct, at least you know you are getting a quality product. But probably be better off just buying a Jacoby imho that has a "normal" joint that is easy to get a new shaft and/or LD shaft to fit. Plus, that Schuler joint really locks up like a bastard when the temparature changes![]()
I've had horrible experiences with the SLC line. The finish on all of them were just awful.