Hardest hitting cue I ever hit with was Scott Rabon's old "Its George" cue. Current makers...Bluegrass, Omen, Josey, Tascarella.
Addicted2CuesRU said:Josey is the hardest hitting cue I ever played with and liked. I have played with hard hitting cues that have a feel like bamboo, break like a champ, but you have no feel at all (my Thompson sneaky is kinda like that).
That is not at all the case with Josey cues. I would definately buy another Josey. The joint screws together so tight, I think that is how he accomplishes the hard hit. But the shaft still has some nice feel to it.
I vote for Josey for best feeling Hard hitting cue.
Varney Cues said:Hardest hitting cue I ever hit with was Scott Rabon's old "Its George" cue. Current makers...Bluegrass, Omen, Josey, Tascarella.
TheBook said:It seems as if there is always reference to feeback. According to Mike Lambros the cue should feel the same no matter how you hit the CB
http://www.lambroscues.com/indexpage.htm
What are you looking for in feedback?
mikepage said:...
Ron Shepard (of RSB fame) tells the story of I think having an ear infection or something and finding that his speed control was out of wack for the duration. He believed it was because of how he relies on the sound feedback. I think his explanation makes sense.
...
mike page
fargo
the hardest hitting cue i've ever played with, AND still using, is displayed in my signature.Jeff said:What's the hardest hitting cue you've ever played with?
i'd have to say anyone who makes 3-Cushion cues or uses conical taper shafts.Jeff said:What cue makers are known for stiff hard hitting cues?
tedkaufman said:A lot more of the perceived hit is a result of the shaft design, particularly its taper. Arguing which cues hit hard or soft, and which joint design yields a harder or softer hit, is meaningless unless the same shaft is used to measure all cues. The butt construction and joint design will affect the hit slightly, but it is much more about the shaft.
Consider this extreme scenario: take a control sample butt and adapt a broom handle to it with a tip. Now take that same control sample butt and this time attach a 1/4" dowle and tip. Which one will have the harder hit?
Back to the real world of pool ... a shafts taper, whether it is more parabolic as in a billiard shaft (really stiff) or a parallel sided, extended "pro taper" (springy), determines whether the shaft gives more or less. That difference is what really gives a cue a greater or lesser sense of stiffness, or firmness of hit. In short, all else being equal, a shaft with a constant taper (conical shaped) will be stiffer than a shaft with extended parallel sides (cylindrical). The conical shape resists bending due to compression a lot more than a cylindrical shape. Simple physics.
Read the discussion of shaft design on Ray Schuler's website for a more complete explanation. It's very interesting material.
n_den said:conical all the way! no other way around it.
3-Cushion Nut,
n_den![]()
catscradle said:Mike, it would seem to me that by the time you hear the sound, it's too late, the ball is on the way. I can see how during the speed control development period the feedback would be important. However once the speed control "sense" is developed what's it matter? It is all kinesthetic pre-hit feedback that matters then. Maybe over an extended period of time without the feedback I could envision speed control diminishing, but not over the length of time of an ear infection.
mikepage said:True, not hearing a shot can't affect *that* shot.
True, you're not going to unlearn something in a week.
But these are not what I'm suggesting.
Suppose you took a bunch of singers or trumpet players who are accustomed to hearing themselves while they perform and cut off their ability to hear themselves. So they're singing or playing and they hear only silence. Would that impact their ability to play/sing well? I'm guessing the results would vary quite a lot--that some people rely on that feedback more than others to stay "in stroke" or whatever they call the equivalent.
I think it's hard to be in stroke when some of the normal, expected feedback is missing.
mike page
fargo
Flex said:However, many others mean when a cue is a low deflection cue that it doesn't squirt the cue ball too far off a straight line course when struck with sidespin, or english.
So, what do you like? A stiff, squirty cue? Or a stiff, low-squirt cue? Or a whippy shafted cue that squirts the cue ball even less but is "high deflection" because it flops all around?
LOL
Flex