Lambos is one I'm looking to try. Tasc? I got a quote and just need to go through with it.My best hitting cues are not flat-faced. I have a dozen 3/8-10 flat-faced cues that play great, but the top of my list are my Schulers, Lambros and Tascarella.
Cue balance is individual to each cue regardless of the joint material - of hundreds of cues that have passed through my hands - Richard Black and Tim Scruggs SS jointed cues were my most evenly balanced cues. Some forearm woods like ebony are very dense and can be very forward balanced without a SS joint.SS joints are heavy and move a lot of weight to the tip of the cue making the cue front heavy.
I like a cue with just a hint of nose weight--thus wood-wood joints.
Type of joint has nothing to do with the hit. Balance point? Yeah but the joint doesn't dictate the 'hit'.My first quality cue was a 1980's Meucci Original with an flat faced implex join and a soft, silky smooth hit. Many years later I purchased a 2005 Schon with a piloted SS joint. The hit was a much stiffer ping which grew on me. So when I commissioned my custom Gilbert cue, I asked him to go with the same 5/16 x 14 piloted SS join instead of his usual flat faced ivory joint. 18 years later, the Gilbert is still my main playing cue, and the Meucci is now used by my better half when we go shoot at our local pool hall.
I have 4 playing cues.Type of joint has nothing to do with the hit. Balance point? Yeah but the joint doesn't dictate the 'hit'.
Type of joint has nothing to do with the hit. Balance point? Yeah but the joint doesn't dictate the 'hit'.
You have great taste; of course, everyone usually has a preference.My best hitting cues are not flat-faced. I have a dozen 3/8-10 flat-faced cues that play great, but the top of my list are my Schulers, Lambros and Tascarella.
You have great taste; of course, everyone usually has a preference.
Are all the cue butts & cue playing weights identical for all your cues?
Any chance some of these shafts & butts differ and are lighter or heavier?
Close to, yes. Every cue I ordered is 19oz.You have great taste; of course, everyone usually has a preference.
Are all the cue butts & cue playing weights identical for all your cues?
Any chance some of these shafts & butts differ and are lighter or heavier?
When I ordered that cue in 1984, players were using cues that were mid-19 ozs and heavier. 20 and 21 oz. cueswas waiting for you to weigh in when I saw a post about someone hating ivory. I know your Runde Schon is SS and you used it for years, what did change your mind? As always appreciate your friendship, someday!
I had a debate with someine on the Forum a long time ago about that very point. It involved Tascarella cues.Ivory sleeved stainless has always made me wonder if there is a reason other than looks, also curious about some preference of short sleeved stainless over what would be considered standard. I think DS is known for the SS version. Maybe Dennis will interject.