Diego Lugano
Registered
Which one best Joint pin ?
and serve great Hitting cue ?
Thank you
and serve great Hitting cue ?
Thank you

As long as the pin holds the shaft snug against the butt without shaking loose, I don't think it makes any difference what pin you use.
I don't believe there is a pool player alive that could discern what pin is used - in several otherwise identical cues - in a blind test.
It's been proven. They taped the joints on several cues, and players who "knew" how certain joint pins hit were wrong. Best hitting joint ended up being a Viking sneaky pete with quick release 5/16-18 pin. Everyone swore it wasn't wood to wood. Most often, people think the joint pin affects the hit. Ferrule and tip - yes. Joint pin, no.
Sounds very scientific...
"Slide13" and "Shaft" are the only ones here making any sense. G10 is a material, not a type of thread.
"Best hit" is a very subjective term at best. Kind of hard to say definitively what the best hit is...
If you have a link to reference, please share.
Correct me if I'm wrong but the theory behind the G-10 pin is that the shock wave from impact will resonate from the tip to the grip. Whereas with a steel pin, the shock wave will reflect the back up the shaft once it reaches the steel pin. From my understanding this means a G-10 pin will feel more "active".
I play with a Cog and it feels different to me than a cue with a steel pin.
I believe I could easily tell the difference..
Those are two different things....ones is a material (G10) and one is a pin thread style (radial).
You can get a radial pin in steel or G10 (and brass too I think)
You can get a G10 pin in radial and 3/8x10 and probably others too.
It's been proven. They taped the joints on several cues, and players who "knew" how certain joint pins hit were wrong. Best hitting joint ended up being a Viking sneaky pete with quick release 5/16-18 pin. Everyone swore it wasn't wood to wood. Most often, people think the joint pin affects the hit. Ferrule and tip - yes. Joint pin, no.
This is correct! Main difference between a Radial Steel vs. G10 Radial is the weight. Assuming both cues weighed the same and same balance point - The Steel Radial will have a slight forward weight than the cue with a G10 Radial.
It all depends which cuemaker you choose to make the cue as they each have their own style and method. Radial pin is the biggest pin of all. It is best used on shafts with long taper to stiffen the hit as Radial has a stiff hit.
It was an experiment done years ago. There was a link to it back in the days of RSB. That was exactly the point of the experiment. Some people said they could tell the difference in hit between different joint materials. A bunch of cues were assembled, and the joints were taped up so that the joint style couldn't be felt or seen. Now, this was done before the Uni-loc and Radial became as popular as they are today. But the results were conclusive in the fact that they were inconclusive. No one could tell joint type based on the hit of the cue. Some people have said stainless joints hit harder than phenolic, and vise versa. On the whole, no one could distinguish what joint type a cue had, consistently, based on just hitting with the cue.
I'll have to bug a few of the RSB guys to see if they have any idea where to find the post.
A radial pin is size and the style or the way the threads are cut.
Radial pins can be cut INTO Stainless steel , brass, aluminum. phenolic or anything that can be machined................................
G10 is a material that cam be machined.
And no, radial pins are not the biggest pin used in pool cues,
Joey Gold uses a 7/16 wood pin and so does Larry a cue maker out of Texas...
From my understanding radial pins are hard on wood threads, regardless of the material its made out of.
You can machine a radial pin out of liquid steel or JB weld if you wanted too.
Dennis Searing and Paul Dayton tells me the facts I was just sharing it. Radial is the biggest pin on the most common pin out there. I too knew a guy from some countryside who used a redhead size pin on a cue he modified. Does that mean redhead is a proper pin for a cue or the largest pin? I've had a radial pin cue for over 10 years the shafts are still excellent threads are nice and tight jus like they were 10 years ago. And I play almost everyday same cue. Paul has been building cues longer than most cue makers his choice is Radial. Pat Diviney also preferences Radial.
Hey Mike I also recall in one of my dispatches in Kuwait and seeing a gentlemen's cue with a wood pin bigger than 7/16. I'm pretty sure that's the biggest pin in the world.
Correct me if I'm wrong but the theory behind the G-10 pin is that the shock wave from impact will resonate from the tip to the grip. Whereas with a steel pin, the shock wave will reflect the back up the shaft once it reaches the steel pin. From my understanding this means a G-10 pin will feel more "active".
I play with a Cog and it feels different to me than a cue with a steel pin.
I believe I could easily tell the difference..