K
King Kong
Guest
I heard or read somewhere that in the old days they would drop the cue on the ground and tap the butt end to feel the fibration travel throught the cues to make a cue selection. It sounds logical to me and explains the reason the old cues did not have bumpers on the bottom.
I recently got a Flat Faced Ivory joint cue for my dad last christmas and hit balls with it from time to time. The big pin and metal to wood screw allows the fibration to travel freely through the cue and to your hand gripping the butt of the cue. The travel of the fibration is greatly different then my steel joint cue and I noticed the differnce.
To me it seems like the cue with the flat faced joint gives my hand more information and data to respond to and allows me to make more accurate and delicate adjustments when contacting the ball. It tells me to keep my tip on a second more or let lose the tip from the ball earlier based on the fibration travelling throught the cue.
I think of a cue like a tuning fork. The steel deadends the signal or when the fibration travels down after the tip makes contact the steel makes that fibration information muddy. Does anybody know what woods have better harmonic properties?
I heald several cues and tapped the shaft to feel the fibration travel to the hand gripping the butt of the cue. I have one cue from the Philippines made out of Kama Gong wood. It is used for fighting sticks and is really expensive and hard. The hit is just horrible because of the wood and my need for fibration or harmonic qualities in a playing cue. The harder and more dense woods are typically heavier and less harmonic. I have a solid rosewood 2 peice cue flat faced with brass insert and it has fair harmonic qualities while the Ivory joint to wood has the best harmonics. I think people interpet harmonics or call it hit instead of harmonics when they say "a cue hits good". Cognesti is using some space aged pin that is suppose to have better harmonics then metal. But, all the cognesti's I have seen have really heavy woods with poor harmonic qualities. Who do you think makes cues with the best harmonic qualities or "hit as some wood like to call it and why?
I wrote this because I was curious if anyone else had thoughts on cue harmonics and if there was any data or existing studies?
King Kong
I recently got a Flat Faced Ivory joint cue for my dad last christmas and hit balls with it from time to time. The big pin and metal to wood screw allows the fibration to travel freely through the cue and to your hand gripping the butt of the cue. The travel of the fibration is greatly different then my steel joint cue and I noticed the differnce.
To me it seems like the cue with the flat faced joint gives my hand more information and data to respond to and allows me to make more accurate and delicate adjustments when contacting the ball. It tells me to keep my tip on a second more or let lose the tip from the ball earlier based on the fibration travelling throught the cue.
I think of a cue like a tuning fork. The steel deadends the signal or when the fibration travels down after the tip makes contact the steel makes that fibration information muddy. Does anybody know what woods have better harmonic properties?
I heald several cues and tapped the shaft to feel the fibration travel to the hand gripping the butt of the cue. I have one cue from the Philippines made out of Kama Gong wood. It is used for fighting sticks and is really expensive and hard. The hit is just horrible because of the wood and my need for fibration or harmonic qualities in a playing cue. The harder and more dense woods are typically heavier and less harmonic. I have a solid rosewood 2 peice cue flat faced with brass insert and it has fair harmonic qualities while the Ivory joint to wood has the best harmonics. I think people interpet harmonics or call it hit instead of harmonics when they say "a cue hits good". Cognesti is using some space aged pin that is suppose to have better harmonics then metal. But, all the cognesti's I have seen have really heavy woods with poor harmonic qualities. Who do you think makes cues with the best harmonic qualities or "hit as some wood like to call it and why?
I wrote this because I was curious if anyone else had thoughts on cue harmonics and if there was any data or existing studies?
King Kong