conetip said:
What people are describing is the result of get it out the door for a price.
I had a customer that had an import cue and wanted a new tip on it. I said it well be $15. He said I can buy a new cue for $30.
My reply was, Well , that is what you will have to do then . He said what do you mean?
If $15 is too much for a tip, and you can get a new cue for $30, just do it and save me my time for other things.
At some point, you just have to let them go.
Basically you get what you pay for.
To some people the $30 cue is all they need. They drop them, beat up the cue so bad, there is no respect for equipment. Dare not let them loose on a real cue. It will be beat up like theirs.
I suspect that when you buy a cheap front shaft, pay some one to make it right (assuming the wood is any good) you will be close to the price of getting someone to make it for you in the 1st place.
Now I can understand that as time goes buy and you have a cue that you like but have decided that you now want to make it a smaller shaft size, that is fine. But I do not like it when people comare craftmanship to something that has just been made quick as possible to ship out the door.
By the shape of some of the cheaper shafts, I am thinking that they are centreless ground/ sanded.
Neil
PS my son just broke the US record for F2A speed. He did 173 MPH. off topic but was happy for him.
That pretty much sums It up. If you spend alittle more, buy a fiberglass handle shovel, and leave It outside, It will hold up for reasonable amount of time, but if you buy a cheap shovel, and leave It out, It won't be long before you break the handle off, then the question is to you replace the handle at near or the actual cost as what you paid for the whole shovel or just buy a new one?
Some people compare the repair price that way, but thankfully there are some that understand they are used to that cue regardless of what it cost them, and want to continue to play with what they are used to. I've actually had people tip me more then their cue was worth, so It really depends on the person, but I've seen both types.
One time I had a women that apparently had turned a few up for the night, come up and ask me how much to repair her cues. I don't remember what the repairs were, but they would have been like 3 to 4 times as much to repair as what she could buy them for brand new. I tried to politely explain that to her, and she took offense anyway, as if I thought I was too good to work on her cheap cues.:grin: I kept trying to tell her, no that's not it at all, I'm just trying to save you some money, but man she got Poed at Me:sorry:.
One thing that taught me, is You can't please everyone, and you can't guess what a cue means to someone, regardless of what it would be worth to you, so the best thing is to just quote Your price, and if they give the ol I can buy a new cue for that excuse, then tell them to have at It. You just can't do the job for less.
I charge between 15 and 17 for common tips too, and even at that I have had times where I screwed around with a warped shaft so much that I had to walk away and come back, until I lost money or time (same difference) on the deal. I guess I could have hacked their shaft up, but I don't work that way. If I have to eat It Myself to get It right, then I do, and that happens alot more the I would like. It's just the nature of the beast.
Greg