This is a general ad for Fury Cues.
Fury has come out with over 50 new models - lots of natural wood cues, butterfly splice, full splice, great new inlay designs, sporty looks, etc..
Check them out at www.fury-cues.com
Some examples
Including a new line designed for John Schnidt
and the KwikFire cues designed BY WPBA Pro and KwikFire pertner Val Finnie
All of these cues are made to very high standards on state of the art equipment. The wood is properly seasoned for years according to the best practices of cue making. That means it's graded, cut, graded again, allowed to dry naturally, cut again, graded again, allowed to dry and the process is repeated several more times until the wood is just oversized and ready to be used in the assembly of a cue. Every piece of wood used in Fury cues has been carefully selected from the millions of pieces which are stored in the wood warehouse.
As many of you know most good cue makers hang their wood while it's stabilizing. In the Fury wood warehouse you can see hundreds of thousands of shafts and butts hanging in various stages of cutting and drying.
In addition all the cues are cored. In the butt a sleeve of phenolic has been added to further stabilize the butt and make it easy to change weight bolts.
To make it simple, these are GOOD cues. I have been here at the factory for four years and have witnessed some incredible effort to revamp everything in order to put out some damn good cues. That said my five year old Fury RP4 plays great and is still perfectly straight. So they were building good cues when I first started helping Fury in 2003 and now they are building great cues in my opinion.
Don't get me wrong, these are still production cues not one-off customs. I love my custom cues and I have a Jensen, Tim Scruggs, Mike Stacey, Jacob Grosshuesch (JG), and a Varney. All of which play great.
What I am saying is that the new Fury cues are a LOT of cue for the money and if you are tight on money and you want a lot of cue for it then check out the new ones. Getting a tiger maple plain jane with a grade A shaft and silky smooth pressed irish linen for around $200 is flat out stealing in my opinion.
Thanks for your time.
Fury has come out with over 50 new models - lots of natural wood cues, butterfly splice, full splice, great new inlay designs, sporty looks, etc..
Check them out at www.fury-cues.com
Some examples
Including a new line designed for John Schnidt
and the KwikFire cues designed BY WPBA Pro and KwikFire pertner Val Finnie
All of these cues are made to very high standards on state of the art equipment. The wood is properly seasoned for years according to the best practices of cue making. That means it's graded, cut, graded again, allowed to dry naturally, cut again, graded again, allowed to dry and the process is repeated several more times until the wood is just oversized and ready to be used in the assembly of a cue. Every piece of wood used in Fury cues has been carefully selected from the millions of pieces which are stored in the wood warehouse.
As many of you know most good cue makers hang their wood while it's stabilizing. In the Fury wood warehouse you can see hundreds of thousands of shafts and butts hanging in various stages of cutting and drying.
In addition all the cues are cored. In the butt a sleeve of phenolic has been added to further stabilize the butt and make it easy to change weight bolts.
To make it simple, these are GOOD cues. I have been here at the factory for four years and have witnessed some incredible effort to revamp everything in order to put out some damn good cues. That said my five year old Fury RP4 plays great and is still perfectly straight. So they were building good cues when I first started helping Fury in 2003 and now they are building great cues in my opinion.
Don't get me wrong, these are still production cues not one-off customs. I love my custom cues and I have a Jensen, Tim Scruggs, Mike Stacey, Jacob Grosshuesch (JG), and a Varney. All of which play great.
What I am saying is that the new Fury cues are a LOT of cue for the money and if you are tight on money and you want a lot of cue for it then check out the new ones. Getting a tiger maple plain jane with a grade A shaft and silky smooth pressed irish linen for around $200 is flat out stealing in my opinion.
Thanks for your time.