Greetings,
New to the forum, so I hope these questions haven't been asked a dozen times before.
Is it better, performance-wise, in a cue without points, to make the entire butt (butt sleeve/handle/forearm) from a single piece of wood? And if so, is that how it is usually done? Here I'm talking about sticks whose butt components are not made from obviously different species of wood for aesthetic reasons.
A similar question would be, is there an intrinsic advantage, again performance-wise, to making a cue <with> points (full-splice), and contrasting species of wood? Or is it primarily aesthetics?
I'm talking strictly about 2-piece cues.
I can imagine issues of balance might come into play, or even the tendency for a piece of decorative wood to warp with increased length. But those are just guesses.
What's the truth of the matter?
Thanks.
- s.west
New to the forum, so I hope these questions haven't been asked a dozen times before.
Is it better, performance-wise, in a cue without points, to make the entire butt (butt sleeve/handle/forearm) from a single piece of wood? And if so, is that how it is usually done? Here I'm talking about sticks whose butt components are not made from obviously different species of wood for aesthetic reasons.
A similar question would be, is there an intrinsic advantage, again performance-wise, to making a cue <with> points (full-splice), and contrasting species of wood? Or is it primarily aesthetics?
I'm talking strictly about 2-piece cues.
I can imagine issues of balance might come into play, or even the tendency for a piece of decorative wood to warp with increased length. But those are just guesses.
What's the truth of the matter?
Thanks.
- s.west