This is silly. Would the cuemaker go on record publicly with this opinion? I was talking to one of the world's best cuemaker, and he said he wished he could make them as good as pechauer...see how easy that was.
In reality, hit and playability are subjective, and if you don't like them, it's perfectly ok. But as far as fit, finish, construction, and materials, i would put them equal to or on par with any cue I've ever hit with, custom or production
You didn't know that cuemakers are opinionated?
They even talk about each other the same way.
Let's see, I had a P-20 something, in the blue book, looks just like a nice traditional cool looking Schon.
Finally traded it for a $200 jump-break cue because it just played bad.
The cue flipped around Denver for a few years, several years later it turned up in our shop in the mountains, for a tip or something.
I was holding the cue and a pool room owner was over, looked at me and said "that cue plays like crap" I said "no shit".
The P-series measureman had played so bad there was nothing we could do to make it better.
The word "vague hit" was coined from that cue.
Don't get me started on those small flat faced pin Jp series pieces of junk.
It's not fair that people continually say "buy a Pechauer, same this as a Schon or Joss"
Someone may actually believe that and waste a bunch on money like I did.
The Pechauer finish is excellent, but there is something they do in construction & taper that is way off, and they hit has no life to it, "vague hit"
Just because Pechauer uses similar designs to Schon, and they look similar, the hit is completely different, and when you have cues that can't be turned up, then to me that's a bad brand.
We can tune up a Dale Perry and make it play good, but not a Pechauer.