Kevin Cheng just left his SW to play with a Meucci....
He must be broke .

Looks like a paid endorser.
http://meuccicues.com/
Kevin Cheng just left his SW to play with a Meucci....
Your cue is a tool......when you have tools that you select which fit you, no doubt you'll perform better.....Nuf Ced 'Bout That.
You can buy a suit off the rack in a clothing store but if/when it is not fitted correctly, you'll never look as good as you otherwise would have.
You can also order a custom made suit made from a bolt of cloth and fitted to your exact anatomy relying upon precise measurements.
When you buy a already finished cue from a cue-maker, or cue seller, you have very little to say about how the cue would turn out.
So the specs on the cue are what they are and hopefully the specs are close to what you like to play with, presuming one knows.
The main thing about any cue is how close it comes to having the features you want in a cue, allowing that you know actually know it.
When your cue has the right tip, shaft size & weight, ferrule, joint type, butt weight, & overall assembly parts, it works best for you.
Whether that cue is a production cue or a fancy custom, the closer it comes to meeting your preferred specs, the better you'll play.
The benefit of a custom is the cue-maker is more careful completing your cue & does not any heavy bolts to make cue weight.
Your cue gets crafted from the outset to meet your specs & more thought goes into the specific woods selected for your design.
Again, as long as you play with a cue that comes close to meeting your specs, I think pretty much all things become equal.....JMO.
Matt B.
Bob made him the KC taper on a shaft. Higher deflection. Now he plays with the Meucci. The original question was regarding high end cues being "better" than mass produced. The answer is a resounding NO. Pros prove it when endorsement deals come along. They switch cues constantly. So obviously...they can play with anything. Absolutely proves the concept of "Indian, not the arrow".
Your cue is a tool......when you have tools that you select which fit you, no doubt you'll perform better.....Nuf Ced 'Bout That.
You can buy a suit off the rack in a clothing store but if/when it is not fitted correctly, you'll never look as good as you otherwise would have.
You can also order a custom made suit made from a bolt of cloth and fitted to your exact anatomy relying upon precise measurements.
When you buy a already finished cue from a cue-maker, or cue seller, you have very little to say about how the cue would turn out.
So the specs on the cue are what they are and hopefully the specs are close to what you like to play with, presuming one knows.
The main thing about any cue is how close it comes to having the features you want in a cue, allowing that you know actually know it.
When your cue has the right tip, shaft size & weight, ferrule, joint type, butt weight, & overall assembly parts, it works best for you.
Whether that cue is a production cue or a fancy custom, the closer it comes to meeting your preferred specs, the better you'll play.
The benefit of a custom is the cue-maker is more careful completing your cue & avoids using heavy bolts to make the target weight.
Your cue gets crafted from the outset to meet your specs & more thought goes into the specific woods selected for your design.
Again, as long as you play with a cue that comes close to meeting your specs, I think pretty much all things become equal.....JMO.
Matt B.
So why do they play with customs or high dollar cues until a production company PAYS them to play with their cues ?
Do you play with a production cue now ? Or your own ?
How much of a difference does a cue make? Quite a lot, I'd say.
As a matter-of-fact, like Chopdoc says, I challenge anyone here to try and play a game of pool without one.![]()
I was reading a thread about the best playing cues....I saw names like Lambros, TAD, Scruggs, Tascarella, Southwest etc....So My question is Does a 3,4,5,$10,000 cure really play better than a OB, Jacoby, Joss, Schon ect...Or is this a mental way of justifying the price? Not passing judgement or knocking any cues
ru4....the OP's thread question was...."How much of a difference does a cue make?
Folks....it's no different than custom fitted golf clubs. Even the pros' game suffers when they play with standard loft and lie clubs.
When the cue matches well with your cue profile, you will enjoy the cue more & unless you're the haphazard type, play better.
Just get a cue that matches what you like.......the cue-maker name is far less important than "anything" else....pretty simple.
When the cue matches your specs, it feels & performs more consistently & your game might still suck but it's not the cue's fault.
Well you hear the old saying you can't buy a better golf game ,, to them I say go grab a set of hickory shafts woods and irons and get back to me , you most certianly can buy a better golf game and you can do the same in pool to a lessor degree
I bought a old black boar wanted to get some work done on it so I called Toney first thing he told me was I need to take that Volkswagen shaft off it and add his Ferrari LD shaft to it , so happens that I had a 314 with the same thread on it , I put that on and it was amazing how much better it played with that shaft on it
So yes the cue matters but it's not a magic wand it can't make you a A player if your a D player there is no substitute for practice
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Let me get this straight.....you bought a Boar, only to stick a 314 shaft on it....? Did Tony ask for you to give him his cue back?
Not at all his shaft cost is 500 Iv shot with many although far better far better than his long ivory Ferrell shaft it's pretty much the same as the 314 in my tests
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