List of pro players who stick to wood as their playing shaft

Rolex movements are built like tanks and will keep going and appreciating long after its owner passes away. I personally prefer Swiss or German automatics with other complications / features like chronograph, power reserve meter, GMT hand, etc. I just wish these things didn't cost so much!

As for the cue, I'm quite happy with rock maple shafts but will eventually give CF a shot.

The first 3 watches below cost as much as a custom cue. By comparison, the last watch is like a cue from Walmart.
Expensive chronometers only do one thing….keep time. Custom cues do one thing…..hit pool balls, just as intended.

What you pay for a watch has little to do with anything other than do you like the look, not because it’s more accurate.
The price you pay for a cue has little to do with how good a pool player you are. It really comes down to what you want.

Wood shafts will always have a place because compared to CF shafts, wood shafts are generally inexpensive except for
special edition low deflection shafts that are a specialty item. Cue makers will still offer wood shafts and CF as an option.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1022.jpeg
    IMG_1022.jpeg
    382.1 KB · Views: 13
  • IMG_1009.jpeg
    IMG_1009.jpeg
    330.7 KB · Views: 13
  • IMG_1021.jpeg
    IMG_1021.jpeg
    505 KB · Views: 13
  • IMG_6015.jpeg
    IMG_6015.jpeg
    199.3 KB · Views: 13
  • IMG_5930.jpeg
    IMG_5930.jpeg
    295 KB · Views: 13
Last edited:
The first 3 watches below cost as much as a custom cue. By comparison, the last watch is like a cue from Walmart.
Expensive chronometers only do one thing….keep time. Custom cues do one thing…..hit pool balls, just as intended.

What you pay for a watch has little to do with anything other than do you like the look, not because it’s more accurate.
The price you pay for a cue has little to do with how good a pool player you are. It really comes down to what you want.

Wood shaft will always have a place because compared to CF shafts, wood shafts are generally inexpensive except for
special edition low deflection shafts that are a specialty item. Cue makers will offer the option of CF but still offer wood.
Cue makers will stop offering wooden shafts if customers won’t want them.
CF shafts cost more but will last more so in the long run, they are cheaper.
If you get a cue to play with, you should want a low deflection shaft. So basically standard wooden shafts will only be a collector thing which makes no sense as they will just warp over time in storage and only the butt matters in collecting cues for show.
There are quite a few CF shafts on the market, disregarding the cheap amazon/temu shafts. They have different characteristics so a player can find what they like. The saying CF is CF is simply wrong and based on zero experience with different shafts.
 
You must have prior experience with green wood shafts or something. My Palmer shaft is likely older than you and
straight as a taut string approaching 60 years old. My Schon cue was completed in early ‘85 and is like new. Wood
shafts can warp and can dent. You can’t always eliminate the warp but can repair the dent. A CF shaft won’t warp
but can dent and repairing it is a problem. Wood shafts will outlive the cue’s owner if you take care of your pool cue.
 
I was hoping you were literate enough to notice the words "for reference sake" in an introduction.

You are very well free and welcome to not give a damn. Just please walk past then, don't say anything. Thanks for your attention!
And you're free to put me on Ignore. In fact it would be an honor to be on your Ig list. Keep asking these same old lame questions and i'm gonna keep hammering the shit out of them. Fkng sue me. How's that for literate enough.
 
You must have prior experience with green wood shafts or something. My Palmer shaft is likely older than you and
straight as a taut string approaching 60 years old. My Schon cue was completed in early ‘85 and is like new. Wood
shafts can warp and can dent. You can’t always eliminate the warp but can repair the dent. A CF shaft won’t warp
but can dent and repairing it is a problem. Wood shafts will outlive the cue’s owner if you take care of your pool cue.
I have wooden shafts that are dead straight after 20 years and some that warped, same goes to cue butts.
Point is, wood moves and changes and there is no debate that CF is more durable and more consistent.
You’ll have to bang a CF shaft really hard on something very sharp to ding it.
CF shafts will also outlive their owners even if don’t take such a good care of them.

The only reason that the industry haven’t killed the wooden shafts already is that they can sell you more shafts made of wood in a lifetime than CF shafts so they can make more money of you. And why just sell you a CF shaft when they sell wood shaft and then sell you the CF as an upgrade.

But eventually the production companies will realize that ditching wood is more economical for them.
 
Last edited:
What you pay for a watch has little to do with anything other than do you like the look, not because it’s more accurate.
The price you pay for a cue has little to do with how good a pool player you are. It really comes down to what you want.

Agreed there, though it's the watch features, materials, and movement grade that drive prices much higher than the basic models. My personal collection includes these guys:

Watch Collection - db6mIoA.jpeg
 
Back
Top