Chris,
are you sure the facings on the joint/shaft are ok, it could be simple as refacing them, thats whatthe roll looked like to me.
I had a cue from a very respected cue maker that everyone knows here on AZ warp about 1.5" below the joint, and I didnt get a lift of the tip off the table as bad as in the video, I'd say 75% that bad. I called him(were friends) and until I never mentioned it here, we decided to let the cue sit for a couple months to get acclimated to Vegas(cause its so dry) 4 months later the cue is lazer straight. It just needed to adjust to the climate and it came right when it adjusted. I had a similar thing with a Tad I bought from Asia-6 months later it was straight. If it was straight from day one it might need time to adjust.
I'd look into the refacing thing as well.
Chis knows more about cues than I do with out a doubt, I just wanted to share my experiances, that cues can come right after they acclimate.
best
eric
Eric,
Good idea - I forgot it may straighten out when it fully acclimates.
The cue could well have a temporary warp. There is a certain amount of climate shock in the shipping process as well. That's because there is always excess moisture in a cue that is acclimated to tropical areas. Singapore will have a humidity average of 80%+ year round.
One time I built a humidor for a business associate of mine in Hawaii and installed a humdifier. Even with no liquid, the interior of the humidor was 75% year round - and that was indoors, air conditioned.
On cues, as they acclimate, if the moisture in one part of the wood dries out faster than another part, it causes tension in the wood. Wood fibers contract and expand based on their humidity level. Too see how strong this effect is, if you take a piece of wood veneer and wet one side, it will curl up like you wouldn't believe - but wet the other side and it will once again lie flat.
Facing will correct a misalignment at the joint connection. If it was misaligned at the joint, when he took it to the cue maker it would have been spotted.
OK - here's my last trick to see if joint facing will correct a misalignment. Take a thin index card and cut a thin 1/4" piece - put some glue stick on it to make it tacky. Mark the bowed out side (visually) and screw the joint together with a piece of the index card side stuck in the joint opposite the bowed out side. Now sight the cue to see if that straightened it out. Even a badly misaligned joint will react to the index card thickness, which is roughly .007 of an inch.
Anyway, I would probably leave it alone for awhile to let the cue acclimate. If it does, you can thank Eric!
Chris