You say there is too much glue involved when it comes to improving resonance and coring. Then you say the purest transition of resonance is done with 4 pt F/S. Well, there is a layer of glue between the entire surfaces of the forearm and butt wood with full splice. Personally, I don't see how you can have it both ways when it comes to blaming the glue. I have not done any calculations, but I'm pretty sure there is more glued surface area in a FS cue than there is in a cored forearm cue.
I will go a step further when it comes to F/S. What happens when you add veneers to FS? Now you have a full layer of laminated veneers that were literally soaked in glue fully separating the forearm and the butt wood. What happens to that pure resonance then? If someone chooses a forearm and then choses a handle wood for a FS construction because they are trying to achieve a certain tone...and then add veneers...
You have touched on an issue(veneers) that has been a concern for me ever since I began building cues in '92.
Customers like veneers but my feelings, at least in the early years, were that every glue joint was another possible point for glue failure. Certainly, today we have many more types of glues to choose from but the number of surfaces put together with some type glue still remain. I still build a number of cues with veneers because that is the preference of many customers.
My personal preference for an A joint build does not involve veneers but I like to use BRE or Ebony for the points and maple for the forearm. The BRE, as we all know, is difficult and expensive to obtain , now. When I core, I use straight grain maple or purpleheart.
This is a great thread, in my opinion and the type information that benefits every cuemaker regardless of how he or she puts together a cue.
Last, a puzzle that you guys might have the answer to or it might just be my imagination but do you notice a hit or tonal difference when you build a 5 point as opposed to a 4 point? I build very few 5 points but I do like them.
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