Hi,
My pin is truncated and I use a stepped minor to accommodate a tight fitting pin / insert interface. The standard 3/8 14 tap with a .312 minor is somewhat of a loose fit for a pool joint so I create an undersized minor then I hand fit every female shaft thread so when it faces it is very tight. Before this hand fitting procedure two hands can not make the joint facing for the last 1/4" of travel because of the pin's truncated geometry.
It is extra work but I believe it is worth it because stitch ring line ups remain constant over time and repeated use because the insert material does not get a chance to degrade like wood and the very tight fit in the last half turn facilitates that.
So I guess I have the ultimate bastard set up but I like the outcome achieved with my custom made truncated pins and insert. After all cue making is about holding tight repeatable tolerances.
Customers don't like pins that loosen up or degrade the female threads. This was my way to avoid that and it took me 5 years to hone my method.
So I think a bastard thread is good if it has an engineering advantage.
JMO,
Rick