Do you use a low deflection shaft? also, do you think that it has helped your game? If not why don't you like them?
It can help your game, but it's not a magic wand. The only way to help your game is through years of practice. But you also have to practice with a purpose. A teacher can help shave years off of the learning curve.bankshot76 said:Do you use a low deflection shaft? also, do you think that it has helped your game? If not why don't you like them?
Those are some good points and I appreciate your objective comments. It just goes to show that perception is not always reality. It may feel and look right, even if it's wrong. It's a hard lesson to learn to go against what your eyes and other senses are telling you. It's kind of like telling a lie. After a while you will come to believe it yourself. I like my predator shafts, but they were not helping me pockets balls as much as I thought they should. The main reason for my inconsistency was my perception flaw due to my dominant right eye. I wasn't seeing the whole picture. Now that I have that fixed I am relearning how to aim. So far it's working out pretty well thanks to Joe Tucker.JB Cases said:I use two, a Fury Extreme 10 piece pie laminate shaft and a Tiger Ultra X and both of them hit pretty sporty. I personally don't like the feel of the Predator shafts but I know that they work.
And I agree that a human can compensate for deflection but isn't it better not to have to all the time?
I have had cues that feel like silk in my hands, my Scruggs, my Joss, and Joss West, my Gilbert, my Jensen, an Olivier that was golden, my Cogs, I mean I have personally owned lots of really nice cues and my company owned hundreds more that I got to play with whenever I wanted to.
That said all of them played a little differently. There is no denying the testing that Predator and Bob Meucci have done regarding what really happens to the cue ball when it is struck.
The shafts work to achieve consistent deflection, be it low or high. What that REALLY means in the real world and how often it makes a difference is surely up for debate. I am sure the science and math guys can develop an equation that shows what a difference having such a shaft makes.
I know that when I went to Predator and saw how they test the shafts it quickly became clear that their product does what it says as far as being able to deliver the cue ball to the exact same spot each time no matter which way the cue is rotated. It was also clear that when shafts from high end cue makers were tested that they did not deliver the cue ball to the same spot each time.
Now you can have any opinon you want to and feel that such and such cuemaker's shafts are the nuts. And that cuemaker's shafts might feel like absolute pure gold in your hands and the feeling when you hit a ball might be the sweetest thing you ever felt, but that doesn't mean that the shaft delivers the cueball to the same spot every time when rotated.
As to why laminated shafts feel different; well it's natural that something that is constructed to perform differently is going to feel different. As my diving coach used to say though, when it feels wrong it's probably right. He was referring to me doing it the right way and going against the way I thought was right.
For me personally I can't play with any Predator shaft. I don't like the feeling. I don't deny that they work though. Right now what works for me and is closer to how a normal shaft feels is the Fury Extreme and the Tiger Ultra X.
JB Cases said:I use two, a Fury Extreme 10 piece pie laminate shaft