This is an early cue built by a master cuemaker to be sure. Has older components including black speck Cortland wrap. It is unmarked.
It has the look of a Joss cue, but I believe it to be a early Tim Scurggs. Scruggs cues were not marketd in 1978 and 1979 when he first left Joss. Early Scruggs cues looked like Joss cues to a degree. The earliest Scruggs cues had maple dash collars like this cue does that are on the outer part of the collar. The joint pin and brass inserts in the shafts are consistent with several other early Scruggs I have found.
I pulled the bumper and it is a silver metal weight bolt with central thread for bumper allen bolt and flathead screw head to remove it. The buttcap is Derlin. The white dots are ivory.
Cue is in 98% condition, a real closet queen, unplayed for 20 years. The points on it are razor sharp, not an import or rookie cuemaker so I think we only have Joss, JW, Richard Black and Scruggs to consider. Of those the only one to use this type of joint collars was Scruggs. Later McDaniel who worked with Scruggs and in his early years he made them the exact same way. Joss and JW collars would be centered in the black phenolic with longer rectangular blocks.
All 3 shafts dead straight with ivory ferrules. A few tiny finish dings in butt sleeve, the wrap and forearm are flawless. The work is just perfect.
It has the look of a Joss cue, but I believe it to be a early Tim Scurggs. Scruggs cues were not marketd in 1978 and 1979 when he first left Joss. Early Scruggs cues looked like Joss cues to a degree. The earliest Scruggs cues had maple dash collars like this cue does that are on the outer part of the collar. The joint pin and brass inserts in the shafts are consistent with several other early Scruggs I have found.
I pulled the bumper and it is a silver metal weight bolt with central thread for bumper allen bolt and flathead screw head to remove it. The buttcap is Derlin. The white dots are ivory.
Cue is in 98% condition, a real closet queen, unplayed for 20 years. The points on it are razor sharp, not an import or rookie cuemaker so I think we only have Joss, JW, Richard Black and Scruggs to consider. Of those the only one to use this type of joint collars was Scruggs. Later McDaniel who worked with Scruggs and in his early years he made them the exact same way. Joss and JW collars would be centered in the black phenolic with longer rectangular blocks.
All 3 shafts dead straight with ivory ferrules. A few tiny finish dings in butt sleeve, the wrap and forearm are flawless. The work is just perfect.
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