Chalk is like tips, ferrules, joint types on cues, etc. It is subjective, ask 20 different people what they like on any of the above listed items and you'll get a host of different answers and more often than not people are very passionate about their choices and will defend them. As far as chalk goes I'm one of those nut jobs that have a hoarded stash of preflag Masters which is all I use.
It is odd the things many people think. Someone else posted that "the difference in chalks is between the ears".
It's this simple: There *are* physical, chemical, and functional differences between different chalks (and tips, and ferrules, etc.). These differences are *not* subjective. They are factual, demonstrable differences. It appears that there is a wide range in sensitivity among different people. Some are able to distinguish the differences, and some are not. When the ones who are not capable advocate the claim that there is in fact no difference, they make themselves look foolish. (I'm not saying you are doing this Colonel...your post just made me think of it.) The only subjectivity in this sort of topic is:
1) One's capability to discern the differences
2) One's estimation on whether the differences *that they are capable of discerning* are significant differences.
3) One's opinion on which of the differences deemed as significant they prefer. (personal preference)
Of course any choice in equipment that makes one feel confident will likely have a positive effect whether this feeling is based on fact or not.
I personally use Blue Diamond. My perception is that it "goes on the tip" better than Master's. Also it seems more consistent under a wider range of humidity conditions. I have no data to support this, and I might believe something that is false. I also use Kamui sometimes and I can't see how anyone wouldn't say it is radically different than Masters, for example. In some informal testing using *maximum* spin, I was able to play at the outer limits of the cue ball more reliably using Kamui chalk. I am able to personally conclude that Kamui is much better for avoiding miscues when using extreme spin than any other chalk, and by a significant margin. I can also conclude that it is very messy and gets all over the cue ball.
KMRUNOUT
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