If I stick a Predator shaft on a Scruggs, a Meucci, or a broomstick, it's going to hit the exact same way. .
not so,,,,,,,,,,,
If I stick a Predator shaft on a Scruggs, a Meucci, or a broomstick, it's going to hit the exact same way. .
Actually, Tiger was still using Titleist woods when he was playing with Nike clubs.
not so,,,,,,,,,,,
I have owned and sold 6 custom cues.....over the past 10 years........I never lost a penny on any of these cues sold even with a downtrodden resale market the past few years, Heck, I actually made a profit on every cue sale and one sale netted me a $900 profit. My experience is also very current since my most recent custom cue sale (which was well over $3k) was last month.
As far as I know, there aren't any production cues I could have extensively played like my other cues, subsequently listed the cues for sale (all my custom cues sold fast....under 2 weeks.....and netted a profit on every sale. There's nothing wrong with preferring a own a production cue instead of a custom made cue. So just enjoy those cues and play well but be prepared for a hit on the sale price you'd probably get versus what you originally spent for that production cue.....unless you acquired the cue at a terrific price.
However, some people have figured that more expensive means better. They're using watch and car analogies. Hate to tell you this, but there's no comparisons between comparing Toyota to Ferrari, and applying that same logic to a custom cuemaker vs a production maker. The cues are made from WOOD. Maple is maple. Cored is cored. A Triangle tip on a custom plays the same as a Triangle tip on a production cue. Where I think the production facility has the advantage is repeatability, and automation. With a custom cuemaker, you have one guy that does everything, Some people think that means a better cue. I don't necessarily believe that to be true. .
In my experience, cue sellers VASTLY exaggerate what they make on a cue. It's like when you go to the doctor, and they ask how many drinks you have per week. They take your answer, and multiply by 2, because they know people lie.
I have yet to see anyone cleaning up selling custom cues, unless they're on a wait list for several of the high end makers, or are directly dealing for them. Otherwise, in my vast experience selling cues myself (Thomas Wayne, Josey, Jensen, etc), you either break even at best, make a couple of bucks once in a blue moon, and lose money otherwise. I've sold more than 6 customs. More like 40. And on the vast majority, I still lost money. And that's over the past 16 years.
There ya go again....making the leap and falling flat on your face.......never said anyone would get rich selling custom cues but interestingly there are still lots of successful cue dealers still around....probably just a coincidence.
How would you test drive a cue before you bought it? Meaning you get some test hits. What would you do?
In my experience, cue sellers VASTLY exaggerate what they make on a cue. It's like when you go to the doctor, and they ask how many drinks you have per week. They take your answer, and multiply by 2, because they know people lie.
I have yet to see anyone cleaning up selling custom cues, unless they're on a wait list for several of the high end makers, or are directly dealing for them. Otherwise, in my vast experience selling cues myself (Thomas Wayne, Josey, Jensen, etc), you either break even at best, make a couple of bucks once in a blue moon, and lose money otherwise. I've sold more than 6 customs. More like 40. And on the vast majority, I still lost money. And that's over the past 16 years.
Absolutely so. The shaft will perform the exact same way, regardless of the butt design. A cue butt is purely personal preference. The butt of the cue doesn't flex in any way that makes a shaft perform better. It just provides feedback to your hand. You may think the butt has performance characteristics, but the only person that seems to think a butt design has any performance advantage is Ronny Powell from QuePerfect, and Bob Meucci with the Power Piston design. Funny how no one has actually been able to prove that the butt has any significant performance advantage.
It's all personal feel. And the ferrule and tip, and shaft design, will do FAR MORE than any joint material or pin type will for hit.
News flash - Dan makes his production line with the exact same construction techniques as his 1 of 1 cues. We're talking about playability of cues, not how they look. The OP wasn't looking to buy a collector's piece. He wants a cue he can play with.
As I said, from an investment standpoint, custom is the way to go. However, I don't think you're going to see the same returns on your investment in the upcoming months. The market is becoming flooded with high end customs for sale lately. If I buy a Southwest for $3k, I may play with it for a year, and get $2700 for it a year later. If I play with a $200 Viking, and used it for a year, I may only get $120 for it a year later. I didn't really buy the Viking as an investment opportunity. I bought it to play with. And lost $80 owning it. Meanwhile, I lost $300 on the SW. That's how I look at it. On the vast majority of my custom sales, I lost money. On a few, I made some money. I lost less money on my $400 and less production cues. There's a bigger market for those cues, because they're affordable.
I guess the question is. How many of us have or have had a custom cue and a production cue but play with the production cue because it plays better. How many have had a custom cue made only to find you don't like how it plays? This isn't a knock on custom cues. Custom cues can play great and look beautiful. The hang up can be spending a lot more money and time for a cue only to find out you don't like how it plays. Same thing can happen with a production cue but you probably paid less and may have had a chance to shoot with it before you bought it. Just saying. Nothing worse than waiting for a cue and then being disappointed. So like most of us we either go back to an older cue or get a new one. Custom or production, there is no guarantee your going to like how it plays.
Get this blasphemy... yep I am about to say it:
I have a buddy who has a VERY nice Southwest, Purple Heart and Goncalo Alves... cue is IMMACULATE... he loves it
I hit some balls with it, and HATED IT!!!
Played like GARBAGE (in my opinion)
easily a $4K cue
and at the time I was playing with my wife's PURPLE plain jane McDermott ($140 stained maple cue)... and would take the McDermott 100 times out of 100 if I was playing for $$$
Everything you've mentioned has to do with aesthetics, and has nothing to do with the actual playability of the cue. Figured wood doesn't hit any better than non figured wood. George Balabushka only used straight grained maple, and used Titleist blanks for his cues. Most cuemakers buy Chris Hightower's book, get a lathe, and think they're going to become the next latest and greatest. The fact is the production cue houses know more about cues than the high end custom makers. The high end makers put money into their own pockets. Groups like Joss, McDermott and Viking have sponsored entire tours in the past. They also put high quality cues into people's hands for about a paycheck. Who does more for pool and the players? Think about it.
I also love your impression of people that work assembly lines, factory workers, and unskilled labour. If this is the stance of the custom cuemaker, to shit on the guy that works for an honest dollar to make a reasonable cue, then I'm glad I play production cues. Thanks for the lesson, Mike.
As I said, custom makers make very pretty cues. If you're looking at putting balls into pockets, and want something pretty, there isn't one custom maker that can touch Schon (custom, but considered "production" due to volume sales) on the planet. I have a $500 Viking that would cost $2k if it was done by a custom maker. And I doubt that many but the best custom makers could do it, as it required a 4 axis CNC inlay machine. Oh, and the shaft is straighter than anything I've played with - even the custom guy that hugs his wood before gently turning it every month![]()
'Well it seems your opinion is bias, and you have a real hatred for some custom cue maker or custom cue makers.
Your hatred has blinded you, from the truth.
If you would actually listen to some of the replies you are getting you would see you are kind of on tilt mode .
Your twisting peoples words, and you must of over looked the word DESIGN.
Design is looks and playability and durability..................................................
Ps
I have 40 custom made shafts, I can roll all 40 across the pool table and they all roll straight.
I have never seen that with 40 production shafts,
I don't want to slam any cue maker, production or Custom. because there is no need for it because the cues that people play with and like is 99 % personal preference and affordability.