Why don't you go ahead and enlighten me as to how a tight fitting pin adds to how a cue plays.
OK. If we go the exact opposit of that variable and make the pin extremely loose fitting the physical connection
between butt and shaft will be easily lost. The shaft will come loose with vibration and if you keep on playing
with a loose shaft you will damage the threads and shafts will continually fall on the ground.
Use math and physics. Show me tests where you have taken a shaft with a tight fitting pin and conducted all sorts of data and then show me how you made that fit a proper fit and show me how that data changed. Then show me why that means it is better.
Show me tests where you have proven the opposite. Twice. It has to be a published article in a
well known engineering magazine. You have to use emotion, feel and the color taupe.
Do this and you can argue against sound engineering practices. Until then you are arguing on bias and anecdotal evidence.
Strong words coming from someone who bases his opinions on hearsay.
The only thing that a tight fitting pin is doing is adding radial forces in the shaft. This isn't a good thing.
From an thread engineering standpoint, probably true. Still missing the point of why they choose
to make them like that though. Thread engineering was not their no1 priority, and given that
it has never failed in the hundreds of cue I have sold even things they do not make their no1
priority they get done pretty darn reliable.
I will again offer up the example of the thin walled ferrules since it is one of the easiest ones.
Make the ferrules thicker walled and they are stronger and much less likely to fail (Mezz ferrules
do fail occasionally) but you'd be missing the point of the thinner wall. It was not done because it
was better engineering.
gr. Dave