I've been through too many shaft changes in the past year - don't ask me why. From a Predator Vantage to a Predator Revo to a Mezz EXPro and now most recently to a Mezz WX900. Always searching for that magical cue/shaft that at least mentally will allow me to maximize my potential.
For those of you fairly skilled players that have been through various shaft changes, assuming 3 practice sessions a week for 2-3 hours per session, how many weeks would it realistically take until you really start feeling comfortable with the new shaft? To clarify, I don't mean comfortable with the shaft in a practice session, which obviously is totally different than feeling completely comfortable with the new shaft in a tournament match or serious gambling session - which is what I'm referring to?
I know everyone is different, but I'm guessing at least 3-4 weeks at the very minimum, and possibly 2-3 months to be completely comfortable. Thanks for your feedback.
Ok bare with me here...
in my honest opinion... The difference between practice, and the tournaments/money games you mentioned is the mental part of the game, not the equipment.
There is no set time for getting use to a change on a cue, shaft, both; you will know when you know. Your practice drills should be quantitative to track improvement.
However, you can't get there with constant change; that is a lesson I still re-learn sometimes!
You can perform at a amazing level using a cue off the wall as you learn the cue but add several cues into the mix and you are pulling your hair out.
Find something that feels good. Decide if you are a LD person or not; your choice, your business; however, going back and forth is death your game as well as your confidence in your game.
The kicker is... I am not only talking about the group of LD shafts vs non-LD...
EVERY shaft has deflection, some a lower and higher than others...
Decide the shaft that feel best and stop switching; every manufacture and even the different styles/designs within that manufacture have a different level of deflection.
Every change requires your brain to re-learn the compensation.
You can always attempt to remember where to aim on specific shots but until its natural it will come and go (like under pressure).
Of course, we always remember after we miss...
That said (and in contradiction) some setups will feel better than others and yes it is a feel thing based on weight balance/center point, preference, etc.
For example, I play with a 19oz and have for many years.
I picked up a fairly rare custom cue for my small collection; it felt great, hit great, but within the first few strokes I was commenting about how much lighter this cue was verses mine.
I was thinking maybe 18oz, can't be any more than 18. I wanted to try it at same weight as my shooter so we broke out the scale and to my surprise the damn thing is 19.75...
WTH; it's 3/4oz more than mine. The cue was so well balanced it seriously felt lighter...
Needless to say, it is now my playing cue. Within a couple of weeks I have surpassed the confidence from of my previous cue and the fire is burning and I can't play enough table time.
I am rambling but my point is to stop looking for a time table and isolate your equipment. With the amount of time you mentioned putting in, you should see incremental improvement.
I am still having a hard time understanding your reference towards equipment when it comes to practice vs important games...I understand there is an obvious difference but respectfully, it has nothing to do with the equipment and that mindset needs to go away.