I have been watching too. I have passed up a few for various reasons but am confident I will get something I want.
What sort of thing are you looking for?
I have been watching too. I have passed up a few for various reasons but am confident I will get something I want.
Just curious, have you ever tried one on a pool cue ball? With the additional mass of a pool cue ball, I wonder if that would hold up in pool as well as it does in snooker.
I would like to try a snooker cue, a quality one like Parris, to play with. I was checking ebay for them and seems they are only really available in the UK.
By the way, this is one of the more interesting threads I've seen in a while. I guess that makes me a true cue nerd.
What sort of thing are you looking for?
I actually did shoot quite a lot pool with snooker cue when I was still a kid . Did not know anything about deflection back then. I try shoot in the near future some shots with my friend snooker cue(maybe even video some short test..).
I personally don´t like Parris because their conical taper is so weird(I think it is customizable). I like more maple one piece snooker cue(they have normally close to pro taper kinda taper..). I play snooker with my Falcon+Predator Z2 with Elk Master. I did buy that Z2 just for snooker around 2 years ago. Only weakness for it is when you want make really low draw shot. That is more difficult because shaft diameter is slightly too big for going so low.
I really like that combo for snooker. It have less deflection with snooker balls than my solid bear(black ring) shaft(+same Falcon butt) when I play pool.
I made century break second time I played it and made several after that. With snooker cue I made only 2 centuries(9 total).
P.s I am not cue nerd even I know quite a lot of that subject. That is because I play Pool, Snooker, Finnish Kaisa and sometimes Russian Pyramid. Every game have different cues and I try always use cue that get similar deflection. Actually my pool (with regular shaft) have more deflection than any other cue in other games.
I gonna upgrade my 20 year old poolcue soon(ish) to get little less deflection. I don´t still like LD shafts on pool. But in other games I think they are essential because pocketing is more challenge!
I played for a year in the UK. Mostly snooker, and mostly with my Joss pool cue. I tried snooker cues, but played better with my Joss, probably just because the snooker cues were so different.
The larger tip did present some slight challenges for draw shots. But I seem to remember not trying to put much of any kind of spin on the cue ball most of the time. I was playing center ball a lot, more than in pool.
You mention Russian Pyramid. I am also interested in a Pyramid cue. I am curious how one will play pool. also just want one for my collection.
And....I am definitely a cue nerd.
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Best Pyramid cues are so beautiful masterpieces:smile:. My newest pool student is reigning Finnish Pyramid Champion and his cue plays great and looks great. I try get photo from it. Btw. Those cues normally have a lot thinner butt than pool cues.
I think it's possible that these serve a purpose. When you are feathering (taking warm-up strokes) with a chevroned ash cue, your eyes see a lot of motion from the cue in peripheral vision. In comparison the motion of a clear, white maple shaft is far less visible.... Just for clarification, one will see the "arrows" referred to as "chevrons" occasionally. ....
I think it's possible that these serve a purpose. When you are feathering (taking warm-up strokes) with a chevroned ash cue, your eyes see a lot of motion from the cue in peripheral vision. In comparison the motion of a clear, white maple shaft is far less visible.
I think it's possible that these serve a purpose. When you are feathering (taking warm-up strokes) with a chevroned ash cue, your eyes see a lot of motion from the cue in peripheral vision. In comparison the motion of a clear, white maple shaft is far less visible.
I think that when you are first learning to make the cue ball go in an intended direction by having the cue stick move in a closely related direction that your brain is combining a lot of inputs most of which you never consciously focus on.I don't notice the chevrons at all when playing, focusing on something like that would surely be detrimental to one's game. ...
I don't notice the chevrons at all when playing, focusing on something like that would surely be detrimental to one's game.
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I think Pyramid would be a great game to learn. Problem is, finding a table in North America.
I have a problem finding a 9 footer and a Snooker table in town.
Good afternoon, gentlemen.
Here are a few of my snooker cues. The lower one has an oaken shaft which is rather unusual. I also have an old pearwood cue, a timber similar to maple but slightly darker and offering a smooth action no matter how sticky one's hands.
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