Its only going to go up in value, quite a bit and in less then 10 years. Guaranteed, the Alamo cue is like a piece or Art, bushka style.Nice cues and damnit I’m hanging on to an Alamo cue of his because of what’ll bring in 10 years, even tho I want a new Mtb bike very bad!
I bought an Alamo cue with ivory joint from Bill Grassley. I traded it back eventually for a different RB cue.Nice cues and damnit I’m hanging on to an Alamo cue of his because of what’ll bring in 10 years, even tho I want a new Mtb bike very bad!
I offered it up for sale in like 2016 for $3500 and got no bites, but looking at the prices of cues on here, I’d think it’d be worth considerably more than those cues. But only worth what someone will pay I guess.Its only going to go up in value, quite a bit and in less then 10 years. Guaranteed, the Alamo cue is like a piece or Art, bushka style.
There’s a reason why cues with high prices don’t typically sell fast.
Sellers that overprice the cues lower the price or else it remains unsold.
Cues priced right, even when it’s a big number, tend to sell relatively fast.
The reputation of the cue maker has a lot to do with the cue’s popularity.
Most buyers overvalue their cues when listing the pool cues for sale. At cue
exhibitions, sellers price their cues for sale based more on real market demand.
I bought an Alamo cue with ivory joint from Bill Grassley. I traded it back eventually for a different RB cue.
I sold that RB cue so I could get my Scruggs cue and wish I hadn’t and would have still gotten the TS cue.
The RB cue I sold was a rare one and I haven’t seen any since. It was a RB Bushka pool cue with an ivory joint.
I kick myself for selling that cue despite that I wound up with a beautiful TS cue (radial pin ivory joint) instead.