NEW... 10mm GoCustoms shaft..

I mean 10mm is a decent size for snooker. Many will think it's a little too big, but I play with a 10mm shaft now. If it were guaranteed to always be slick like a Revo, I may actually consider it, since I've been having a little bit of problem keeping my shaft slick enough for my liking. That is the ash shafts I use for snooker, not maple pool shafts.

In snooker I don't find deflection as much of a concern, but feel certainly would be, and it's not a strength of carbon fiber shafts in general.
Karl Boyes allready reviewed the shaft some time ago:
 
I mean 10mm is a decent size for snooker. Many will think it's a little too big, but I play with a 10mm shaft now. If it were guaranteed to always be slick like a Revo, I may actually consider it, since I've been having a little bit of problem keeping my shaft slick enough for my liking. That is the ash shafts I use for snooker, not maple pool shafts.

In snooker I don't find deflection as much of a concern, but feel certainly would be, and it's not a strength of carbon fiber shafts in general.
Karl Boyes allready reviewed the shaft some time ago:
10mm in snooker is the equivalent of 13mm in pool

Not too many play with that size, but good luck selling a custom cue with a smaller shaft
 
10mm in snooker is the equivalent of 13mm in pool

Not too many play with that size, but good luck selling a custom cue with a smaller shaft
You're right, not too many people play with a 10mm or larger shaft for snooker, but I certainly think most people COULD. I found out I potted long shots better with a larger diameter shaft and after that long potting became a strength instead of a weakness. If the guy wanted to make a snooker only shaft, I think the best diameter would be 9.5mm, which is kind of the gold standard for shaft size in snooker.
 
Probably an OK shaft with pretty low deflection, but this is false advertising:

"GO SNK (zero deflection)"​


pj
chgo
 
You're right, not too many people play with a 10mm or larger shaft for snooker, but I certainly think most people COULD. I found out I potted long shots better with a larger diameter shaft and after that long potting became a strength instead of a weakness. If the guy wanted to make a snooker only shaft, I think the best diameter would be 9.5mm, which is kind of the gold standard for shaft size in snooker.
Relationships.....my snooker cue was 10.4...maple....it squirted less than a 9.5 ash cue with the British taper.
...my taper was caromish...British taper is thicker in the middle...and a brass ferrule hits harshly.
i think you should try a Z shaft...it squirted much like my cue...and much kinder than a standard British cue.

The British are hooked to brass ferrules much like the older pool players are hooked to ivory ferrules...
....they’ll get over it.
 
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I mean 10mm is a decent size for snooker. Many will think it's a little too big, but I play with a 10mm shaft now. If it were guaranteed to always be slick like a Revo, I may actually consider it, since I've been having a little bit of problem keeping my shaft slick enough for my liking. That is the ash shafts I use for snooker, not maple pool shafts.

In snooker I don't find deflection as much of a concern, but feel certainly would be, and it's not a strength of carbon fiber shafts in general.
Karl Boyes allready reviewed the shaft some time ago:
I'd say that would double as a fantastic break cue for English pool with a hard enough tip fitted.

If it came available as a 3/4 or a one-piece, I'd consider buying it for snooker. Looks pretty slick. The only major downside is that it doesn't appear to have an SD joint fitted.
 
I just ordered one. The total cue with the 10 mm shaft. I have played 8 and 9 ball with a 10mm snooker cue and like how it played, but wound up selling it before putting a lot of table time in with it. Will give a report once I get it and had a chance to play with it for a while.
 
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