I can’t know what your experience with wood shafts has been but it sounds like the cue makers you tried were prettyI found A bigger difference going from a 314-1 to a 314-3, then going from a 314-3 to carbon. What I like most about carbon is humidity has no effect on the feel of the shaft. With wood I’d feel differences in the smoothness when humid and I would feel the shaft swell a bit carbon has no effect. I don’t wear gloves but if you use powder it’s going to feel like sandpaper on the shaft. I now carry a towel to dry my hands or clean my shaft. But my hands really don’t sweat either
I‘ve been a predator user for 20+ years, I didn’t think of any other brand
inept. Not one of my cues, and my Runde Schon is 40 years old, has had any shaft swell or react to humidity unless the
indoor sprinklers were set off by accident. The shaft wood does not react and remain straight and smooth, I use
Renaissance Wax to seal my cues and it works. Museums use this wax to protect wood finishes on art treasures worth
many times more than my entire collection of pool cues. A good cue maker delivers a quality product and shaft swelling from being exposure to humidity is a pretty inferior product, IMO. You might want to try instead of powder, strained and
sifted corn starch or baby talc. Both will allow a properly sealed cue shaft to glide through even a tightly closed bridge.
At the pool hall today, I had all my cues out for a player to examine and try because he wanted to have a custom cue
made and was discussing the cue with Tascarella, a prominent name in cue making. A dozen shafts were out and tried.
Every single shaft is straight as a taut string, still smooth as satin and nary any chalk stains anywhere on the shafts. A
high quality cue will stand the test of time and unless you disrespect your pool cue by how you care for it, store it and
use it playing pool, a pool cue should remain pretty impervious to decay. I even use Renaissance wax of the sides of
my tips, not the tops, to maintain the leather condition. I bet I could play in light rain and my cue shafts wouldn’t swell.