vintagecollectibles831
Well-known member
And now Ramin wood and many others in that genus are critically endangered.
Who would of thought?
Maybe because they made 10 Billion cues using Ramin Wood?
And now Ramin wood and many others in that genus are critically endangered.
Who would of thought?
Adam Cues subcontracted production out of Japan starting in the mid-1990s, and the licensed Balabushka replica cues were shifted to off-shore manufacturing.
1995 – 1998 (The Move to China & Taiwan): Due to rising Japanese labor costs, Adam began outsourcing the majority of its mid-tier production. Standard Adam cues and the lower-end Balabushka models shifted production to China and Taiwan. The mid-90s to mid-2000s outsourcing contract was not given to the Kao Factory. Instead, the bulk of Adam's outsourced production was sent to the Taican (Universal) factory. I said Kao, my mistake.
After 2007 the original Japanese factory scaled down to strictly producing Adam's ultra-premium, high-end boutique Musashi cues, while 100% of standard production permanently moved to China.
1969 – 1995 was sort of the golden era for the original Adam many of us remember and love. The early first catalog cues are legendary with pointed pins and aluminum shaft inserts.
My Kao confusion is due to remembering Harold Miller, the former sales manager for Adam Cues. He later used the Kao Kao factory to manufacture high-end "Cobra Professional" import cues. The Mizerak Professional Series cues were made at that same factory under a deal with Mizerak. These lines directly rivaled the construction of Adam cues.
I still have my Mizerak Dove cue. The Bem is so nice. The wrap was plain nylon and the joints need to be redone.
Taican/Universal has made at one time or another: Lucasi, Players, Predator, Dufferin, ADAM, Buffalo, and many others.Interesting info. I bet Taican is who made the Lucasi cues, during that same time period. Because they numbered all of their cues. The numbers just all looked the same. Never understood what they meant though. They even Numbered the very low end Players cues.
I heard those numbers had something to do with internal production.Interesting info. I bet Taican is who made the Lucasi cues, during that same time period. Because they numbered all of their cues. The numbers just all looked the same. Never understood what they meant though. They even Numbered the very low end Players cues.
I heard those numbers had something to do with internal production.
My Lucasi has 7-11 on the butt just like the old pool room 7-11 in NYC, that I visited a few times in the 60's.