AzBilliards Official Tip Poll

What's your favorite cue tip based on maintenance/performance...

  • How soft/med/hard

  • Zan plus soft/med/hard

  • Zan prem soft/max/grip hard

  • Ki-tech ss/soft/med/hard

  • Tiger Onyx/sniper

  • Predator victory/soft/med/hard

  • Kamui tan soft/med/hard

  • Kamui Black soft/med/hard

  • Moori soft/med/hard

  • Kamakaze ss/soft/med


Results are only viewable after voting.
i got a pooldawg8 milk dud on the player, phenolic on the breaker and a white diamond on the jumper and they all seem to fulfill their respective purposes.
 
Try shooting through the ball.
Just an aside, tips don't have fingers and a thumb.
They don't grip anything.
It's you shooting through the ball.

I prefer a hard tip and enjoy the sound of a hard tip.
The nice thing about a hard tip is they get harder over time.
Eventually that super soft tip gets harder over time too.
Tips may not grip but I guarantee you that they compress over time, especially a layered tip.
nope. I don't play with soft tips. the triangle I got is just junk. I know how they are suppose to play. thanks tho (y)
 
Triangle. Use them on my Joss. Holds it's shape even if I break with it for 9ball, has a nice medium hit to it and holds chalk like a champ. Never delaminates or glazes over.
 
Like Earl and Efren i use Mighty Elkmaster!
I have a question for you. Back in the late 90's I used Elkmaster all the time. I remember when they are first put on that every shot I took would put a dent in the tip until it hardened up a bit. Also they wore down very quickly because of constantly reshaping. However I loved the way they felt and played. I had an Elkmaster installed on a cue several months ago. It did not resemble the Elkmaster I remember. It was one piece of course but was a lot harder, held it shape, didn't dent and didn't seem to hold chalk as well as I remember. Has Tweeten changed the way they make them in the last 25 years?
 
I have a question for you. Back in the late 90's I used Elkmaster all the time. I remember when they are first put on that every shot I took would put a dent in the tip until it hardened up a bit. Also they wore down very quickly because of constantly reshaping. However I loved the way they felt and played. I had an Elkmaster installed on a cue several months ago. It did not resemble the Elkmaster I remember. It was one piece of course but was a lot harder, held it shape, didn't dent and didn't seem to hold chalk as well as I remember. Has Tweeten changed the way they make them in the last 25 years?
they can vary some if you don't hand pick them yourself
 
they can vary some if you don't hand pick them yourself
THIS ... often box of 50 have 10-15 bad ones. Also installation process is easy to make tip bad.
I also hit hour just center ball with speed after i put new one. Not really shape before it. Just to hammer it tighter. Then I shape it roughly and play couple days. After that I shape it. After that I normally don´t touch it about year.
 
THIS ... often box of 50 have 10-15 bad ones. Also installation process is easy to make tip bad.
I also hit hour just center ball with speed after i put new one. Not really shape before it. Just to hammer it tighter. Then I shape it roughly and play couple days. After that I shape it. After that I normally don´t touch it about year.
Thank you. I had a local pool repair/cue smith install it. perhaps I just got a bad one.
 
THIS ... often box of 50 have 10-15 bad ones. Also installation process is easy to make tip bad.
I also hit hour just center ball with speed after i put new one. Not really shape before it. Just to hammer it tighter. Then I shape it roughly and play couple days. After that I shape it. After that I normally don´t touch it about year.
Is there a means to identify the bad ones before installing?
 
Tips may not grip but I guarantee you that they compress over time, especially a layered tip.
The flat earthers on the forum will tell you it's the chalk wearing down the tip, not compression that makes them smaller.
 
The nice thing about a hard tip is they get harder over time.
Eventually that super soft tip gets harder over time too.
Played with the hardest (non breaker) tip I could get for decades. When I changed my equipment +2yrs ago. I demo'd the cue with a Zan soft on it. Absolutely loved the feedback. When I switched to a different shaft I gave my cue guy fits for all the tips I went through trying to get it back. Softs, super softs, or whatever ultra flaccid tip he had kicking around. Eventually I ended up with some kind of soft whatever...

Been playing with it for a long time now. I'm sure it's up to a medium rating now...lol. I'm just going to leave it on until it compresses down to a 'hard' and get back into that groove. Fortunately I know no matter how much I chalk I won't run out of tip. So I should be good to go until it delams.
 
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Attempted to install my first Moori last night. As soon as the tool hit the tip, it completely fell apart. Came from a sealed package. Total delamination.
 
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