In general, to me, a break cue should allow me to use as less as possible body power to get a certain level of cueball speed AND control o the cueball (relation of effort and result RER). I have tried yet many different wooden shaft break cues and also a couple of the carbon shaft break cues (Mezz, Cuetec, Go and Predator). From these four carbon break cues it was clearly the bk rush that was outstanding in terms of RER. The bk rush was so extreme to me that the feel in my grip hand was way too intensive, the feeling in my grip hand was unpleasant to me because of the strong vibration that you feel in the grip hand. The bk rush allows to use very little body / arm power and accelerates the cueball very much. The RER of the bk rush is to me an innovation because it is the best RER that I experienced so far at a brek cue. If I were a pro, I clearly would decide using the bk rush, maybe I would put on a slightly softer tip.I want to start this by saying this is just my personal experience . We are all different so for you it may not be the same. If a break cue helped your break your not wrong. but I feel that expensive break cues are way over hyped. At the expo this year I bought the new bk rush and air rush. ...
Do I need something like bk rush really: No, because I have so much deficits in my pool playing abilities that it would be like throwing pearls before swine. And it is not so important to me optimizing my break. Better I put my energy into optimizing my other playing abilities. But at the other hand I do not want to use any kind of cue for the break. Actually I'm using a break cue from IQ cues where the RER is OK to me. But for example the power breaker does cost way less and is on the same RER level to me like my IQ.
As my latest experiment I modified a very cheap playing cue (brandname "Stöhr") in order to be optimized for breaking, and this experiment ended up very positively: With this modified playing cue the break feels very dynamic, the RER was at least as good as with my IQ break cue, and very good control. The result was surprisingly positive: At my first session with this modified cheap noname cue each 10-ball break was successful, and now I will use it for a longer period. If then I'm still happy with it I'll probably sell my IQ break cue.
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