Cuelees cues, anyone tried them?

Greetings. I am in the market for a Cuelees cue. Do you sell them? Thank you for your time and consideration in this matter.


Kind regards,

Craig
Hi Craig

Got most of their cues in stock, but we only sell and ship within EU.
Below is some of the Cuelees cues we got in stock.
 
dont know much or anything about cuelees cues. but do see many clueless buyers of cues.

if you are going to buy a higher priced cue get one custom made for you. or get any cheaper decent good hitting cue to play with.
 
The skill and craftsmanship that goes into making a custom cue is astounding, when well done they are a work of art, a one of a kind cue most likely no one else will own, in the past production cues were not built with the care of a custom cue, modern tools have made it so that it is much easier to get more precise and repeatable results so most production cues today function as well as any custom cue, will owning a one of a kind or limited edition cue justify the sometimes considerable cost? In the past it was a definite yes, with cue production companies paying players to use their cues and even building insert players name cues it will be interesting to see what cues will be most desirable, for me I only care about the quality of the hit and how it feels to me, the best looking cue to me is the one that helps you win the match.😉
 
I got Cuelees in stock and played a lot with the cues.
Quality is very good, solid feeling, pretty stiff cues that goes very straight.
So far, I and the players who have bought or play with a Cuelees cue feel that they really play much better after they made the change to Cuelees.
And yes, real cues, not 100 USD sticker cues.
Some of my inventory:

looks like a good way to have a bunch of crooked cues ... hahaha ... do you have any to sag in the middle?
 
CueLee's (LiSi 李斯) is one of many great Chinese made cues (such as 福杆 Lucky Cues, 翼杆, Zen, O'min China (not to be confused with the Thai snooker cue maker whose name they profit from) and many more)

CueLee's are well made, I am not sure if there is a difference in domestic China product and their exported cues. My first break cue was LiSi and it hit very nicely, swapped it out due to phenolic tip and opportunity to get something more expensive at a good deal where I could sell on easily if I didn't like... (I liked).

Have used a couple of their cues. One friend plays with one of their higher end cues (around 12k RMB) and have used both their solid wood and CF shafts on this. Both shaft hit just as well as anything else I tried. Another friend uses a mid-range cue (around 6k RMB), not much difference in quality to me besides the fancy stuff.

I find some of the crazier inlays and nonsense going on at the bottom end a little pointless, but some people go nuts for it. Not exactly collector cues, and from the production line, so I don't get the need for the flash.

But yeah, solid hitting cues at a great price point.

I would be interested in buying one if they stopped using shark leather
 
Cuelees EX Solid figure smaller.jpg


BigBreakSheikhYT rated Cuelees' shafts his top three shafts. Number one was EX Solid that looks like wood near the cue tip and carbon fiber near the joint. Its more complicated, however, than that. Near the tip are two types of wood ("internal reinforcement of . . . various wood species"). A few inches from the tip, the inner piece of wood is replaced with a carbon-fiber rod extending to the joint end. Near the joint, the wood core is encased with another carbon fiber rod to make a wood and CF sandwich there. See figure.


S Tier: (Best of the best)

Cuelees Ex Solid: My favorite shaft ever. 12.2mm diameter (which is just perfect imho) solid maple with a carbon fiber core with a carbon fiber base. This shaft is just perfect. Very low deflection - extremely solid - lots of feedback - and great power. There is nothing on the market that I've tried that feels remotely as good. Won lots of matches and tournaments with this shaft.

Cuelees CT2: I have less experience with this shaft, but its almost identical to the Ex Solid - same diameter - same materials. The main difference is that this shaft does not have a CF base. This results in a significantly less powerful hit and more "wood-like" performance. Still an incredible, high performance shaft.

Cuetec R360: Before the CF craze, this was, in my opinion, the best shaft on the market in terms of feel. Feel is the most important element of any shaft for me - with performance being second (since you can adjust to pretty much any shaft as long as you like the feeling). The R360 shaft just feels awesome, and the taper and deflection levels were ahead of their time. When you also take into consideration that this was a budget option at the time, it makes an easy S-tier shaft for me
 
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