justinb386
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Thanks for clearing that up Shawn. I had an old Orchid USA veneered 4 pointer years ago with a 5/16x14 joint that I suspected blank came from a top tier shop in Taiwan and finished here in USA ? . The quality was pretty impressive. Believe it was made in the 90's.
Have a good weekend,
I guess I'll answer the question for anyone who may have wanted to know. Hercules was a tip line that was sold by Competition Cue Sports. They were also the guys that marketed Karella cues. These cues were made by the KPS group - that other cuemaker out of Taiwan. The same group that made Orchid, Falcon, Bear, etc. The Hercules cues were made by KPS as well. So, no to the Miki question.
Hope that helps.
Thanks for your reply Shawn. It sounds like I was lied to then, because I was told that this Hercules cue was made by Adam by the customer service person at shooters billiards. Here are pics of the cue that I was really interested in buying. Even if it was in fact made by Kps in Taiwan, is it a good quality cue or not ? When were these cues made, and were they well made cues , with good playability? I could not find Hercules cues on any other websites, so it seemed that maybe they were limited edition, and well made cues.
The questions arise because of the differences between manufacturer, distributor, and marketer.
Some of the brands mentioned were actually made by several different manufacturers.
Falcon? At leat three.
Orchid? At least two.
Biagio? At least three. (Not mentioned above).
Some of these branded cues were quite good for the money. Knowing the difference is the thing.
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That cue looks decent, but nothing special. You can find a heck of a lot more cue for $425. That cue is not at all an Adam
Um, as far as I know, Falcon has always been made by the same company. KPS. They had a Canadian operation in the 90s when they started out. I was in the plant many times. When the US dollar tanked in 2008, Falcon lost their contract with Predator to make the shafts and butts. They shut the Canadian plant down, and moved the operation back to Taiwan. That's where they're still made today.
If you have some facts to back that claim up, please share them. But as far as I know, the Falcon line has only been made by Falcon/KPS. KPS being the parent company. So, really only one manufacturer.
I guess I'll answer the question for anyone who may have wanted to know. Hercules was a tip line that was sold by Competition Cue Sports. They were also the guys that marketed Karella cues. These cues were made by the KPS group - that other cuemaker out of Taiwan. The same group that made Orchid, Falcon, Bear, etc. The Hercules cues were made by KPS as well. So, no to the Miki question.
Hope that helps.
Thanks for clearing that up Shawn. I had an old Orchid USA veneered 4 pointer years ago with a 5/16x14 joint that I suspected blank came from a top tier shop in Taiwan and finished here in USA ? . The quality was pretty impressive. Believe it was made in the 90's.
Have a good weekend,
That is really nice. Looks like a good (or at least decent) quality cue to me. So, maybe KPS did make decent quality cues (maybe better then most of the other cues in Taiwan or China)?
Hit and miss, on the quality. The Falcon and Bear lines were their flagship cues. Made with high quality woods. Quality shafts, ferrules, joint pins and rings, etc. As you went down the line, you'd see plastic joints, cheaper ferrules, lower quality shaft wood, etc.
A cue's "brand" only goes so far. Sometimes, Honda makes a lemon. It's up to the cue buyer to check for quality. Someone can hand me their perfect cue, and I can usually find a flaw in it. We're talking about an organic material - wood. No one can guarantee perfection in a natural material.
As far as your questions about how certain cues play, the question is pretty much futile. You keep asking how certain cues hit. A brand can hit differently from cue to cue. There are variances in wood densities even among the same line of cues. I had a Joss once with two shafts. One shaft was stiff, and deflected a ton. The other was softer, and hit like an old Meucci. The shafts, although the same dimensions, were nearly .5oz apart in weight. The cue hit differently with each shaft.
I know you're after the magic cue, for $200 or less. Go buy a Players sneaky Pete. $75. They play well. And even if they don't, you won't take a bath on it. But this constant search for the perfect bargain cue has to stop.
Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over, and expecting a different outcome every time. All I have seen from you this past year is you burning money on cheap cues, and still having nothing to show for it.