Corwyn_8...........I do not profess to be a cue-maker. I have ordered and owned several production cues.This includes a couple of the Schon Tribute cues and like I wrote, nothing wrong with production cues in general or limited series versions.
When I design a cue, not withstanding that artistic creativity is my strong point, I expect that my cue will get all the required attention to produce it exactly as I want it to turn out. That means the design will be what I specified and the specs are what I asked for. The cue- maker doesn't get to decide how it turns out other than the quality of his workmanship. The shaft weight, the shaft size, the taper is what I picked, not what the cue-maker might ordinarily use. The weight of the cue butt is what I specify and so is the diameter. The cue-maker is responsible for the anatomy of my cue but I get to say what I want and the cue-maker's challenge is to build the cue the way I want.
Jerry Rauenzahn, very early with my last cue build, let me know the butt weight was going to turn out a little heavier than what I specified due to my ring design that called for eight 3mm copper metal rings since I did not want acrylic. I asked Jerry to try to use thinner rings and I didn't care for the prototype he sent me a photo of so we junked the sleeve design completely and started over on a new design........by the way, the weight difference increase for the cue butt was estimated at 11.75 grams heavier than the butt weight max in the weight range I requested.
I am unaware of any production cue company that will indulge any customer's very detailed specifications and will work as hard to satisfy you as some custom cue-makers I have been fortunate to use. They send you photos of mock-up veneers to approve, progress pictures of your cue, feedback on any issues that might interfere or alter the outcome of the requested design, and most of all , pay enormous attention to the quality, age and weight of the different woods they will be using, often special stock set aside for challenging cue builds.
Does my custom cue play differently than a production cue........for me yes, because the feel and hit is different........and I enjoy the difference. However, my cue does not play any different than any cue might for any other player unless they shared the same preferences I do for the cue construction. A custom cue does not enable you to play better........it will encourage and sometimes even inspire some players to try harder.....to try their very best to validate why they own such a nice cue.......but that's about it. There are cheap production cues and expensive ones too........just like there are great custom cue-makers and also some ho-hum ones as well.
There isn't any production cue company I know of that would adhere to a customer's cue specifications or invest the time to build the cue "exactly" the way the customer wants it made. My custom cue-makers are willing and talented enough to build me pool cues the way I requested the cue to be made, not the way they make a cue for every Tom, Dick & Harry pool player type that comes along. A lot of customers don't know what they want and therefore just default to the cue-maker's normal standards. IMO.....that's a lot more reminiscent of production pool cues than custom cues.
Matt B.
p.s. 6 days and counting down to rotator cuff surgery #4..........ugh!