Is there a difference hit is different woods sneaky petes?

Absolutely.
Hardest-Ebony bottom.
Then coco and bocote.
Then purpleheart, then the other rosewoods ( Indian and other lighter rosewoods ).
 
I think the main difference is in the weight of the wood = weight of the cue. I like the weight of Bocote, Rosewood and Purple Heart but I am not sure that in a blind test if anyone could pick out a specific wood.

Order the cue from a reputable cuemaker and specify the wood you like and if the weight limitations are within the limits of that wood you should like the cue.
 
I don't think its so much the weight of the wood as it is the density of the wood. The tip, ferrule, taper, and joint will probably all have a bigger effect on the hit than the type of wood that is used.
 
metal5d said:
I don't think its so much the weight of the wood as it is the density of the wood. The tip, ferrule, taper, and joint will probably all have a bigger effect on the hit than the type of wood that is used.
I agree somewhat.
I tested 3 butts with the same shaft.
When I say hit, I really mean the feel of the cue ( as opposed to cueball action since that can be manipulated with shaft taper, tip and ferrule ) when hitting balls.
Different woods with different density and reasonace definitely have different feel.
I also tried adding weight at the bottom. By adding 1 oz of weight, the cue's feel definitely changed. It hit the ball harder but the feel in the grip hand lessened.
 
metal5d said:
I don't think its so much the weight of the wood as it is the density of the wood. The tip, ferrule, taper, and joint will probably all have a bigger effect on the hit than the type of wood that is used.
The weight of the wood has a direct relationship to the density of the wood. In other words the more dense the wood the heavier it is.
 
Arnot Wadsworth said:
The weight of the wood has a direct relationship to the density of the wood. In other words the more dense the wood the heavier it is.

Yeah, the definition of density is mass per unit volume...lol. And as we all know, on earth weight can be used synonymously with mass!
 
I just prefer to describe wood using density because weight has a relationship to the amount of material that is used. I agree that if the cue is the exact same design the cue with the "heavier" wood will weigh more.
 
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