Most of the deflection depends on the distribution of mass in the first 6 inches or so of the cue stick. That's not going to change much with time. Maybe you are just more use to the squirt or you are starting to shoot farther from center....
Is it normal for them to lose their low deflection over time?
The adding of a tip that has a fiber pad might increase squirt. I’ve had a shaft that had too low squirt for me, and I ended up putting two fiber pads to get it where I wanted.I have a question about low deflection shafts.
I bought a LD shaft a couple of years ago ago (wood) and I'm sure it deflects significantly more than it used to.
Is it normal for them to lose their low deflection over time?
I'm still fine tuning it but I've found that, with my LD shafts, I use front hand English and then apply a little correction. With a conventional shaft, it was usually 70% back hand and then correct with the front hand.Low deflection shafts (at least the wood ones) require your bridge to be 4"-6" farther back (compared to std deflection wood shaft) to use back-hand-english with desired results.
Dr. Dave made a video about this.
All the calculating is supposed to make it quicker and easier to get to (and maintain) that "automatic" feel, not replace it.I could never do all that calculating and worrying about deflection. I just get down and fire because I've shot it so many times.
I seem to miss those anyway.you will certainly continue to miss all shots you were going to miss
I have a question about low deflection shafts.
I bought a LD shaft a couple of years ago ago (wood) and I'm sure it deflects significantly more than it used to.
Is it normal for them to lose their low deflection over time?
Low deflection shafts (at least the wood ones) require your bridge to be 4"-6" farther back (compared to std deflection wood shaft) to use back-hand-english with desired results.
Dr. Dave made a video about this.
no.I have a question about low deflection shafts.
I bought a LD shaft a couple of years ago ago (wood) and I'm sure it deflects significantly more than it used to.
Is it normal for them to lose their low deflection over time?
Lamination has nothing to do with whether or not a shaft is LD. It’s just a way to use cheaper wood without warpage.Maple LD shafts are, iirc, laminated. Have you checked for delamination?
End mass could change slightly in a wood shaft as moisture is absorbed or dries out. I doubt that it would be enough to be noticeable.i am no expert
but since most agree its "end mass" is the most important thing that determines degree of deflection
i dont see how the end mass would change over time whether wood or cabon
except as mentioned above change in fiber pad/ferrule/thickness tip etc
What you are saying is very true about maple shafts, but too many people read too much into the mass reduction. The reason that is done for wood construction is that removing mass from the centerline of the cue is the only variable they can easily adjust without changing the stiffness or structural integrity of the shaft. Too much mass reduction and you approach the trivial solution—no mass, but no structure. You still need to have the shaft end stiff enough to not deflect excessively and strong enough to withstand normal play.Most of the deflection depends on the distribution of mass in the first 6 inches or so of the cue stick. That's not going to change much with time. Maybe you are just more use to the squirt or you are starting to shoot farther from center.
A minor exception to "not change much".... I had a solid wood shaft I played with for about 15 years. I used sandpaper to clean it from time to time, usually after tip changes. It got less and less squirt over the years.
If it would improve cheaper wouldn't it also improve better wood?Lamination has nothing to do with whether or not a shaft is LD. It’s just a way to use cheaper wood without warpage.
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