Nothing personal against anyone's outlooks, as they are all good ones, and I build a few cues too as some here know, but I don't care what shaft you shoot with, the poster at the top of the page makes a good point. Anyone that has played alot of forced position play in their past, and then trained to play more of technical game has felt this issue at one time or another. The last 5-10 years My game has changed from the ultimate shotmaker to a combination of slow position play, to forced play when a break out was needed or hard shape was needed to be gained. otherwise I don't always wait for the other guy to break me out, but I play no rail position when I can, and sometimes make My own shape to finish a rack out. The combination has been very effective for me most of time, altough inconstenticies have have kept me at a moderate level of play overall. Still I have well over a 75% ratio in league type play against equal high ranks mostly. I have lost a good percentage of my shotmaking capability to the more consistent style of play, but overall I'm still just letting it all hang out. To shorten things up, It's not the cue, and It's not the shaft most of the time, because for me it makes no difference what cue or shaft is in My hand for the most part, and more in My mind, as where My level of play will be in any given night. I'm even dead on, medium, or slightly off on key shots, to just not having My mind in the game and letting the table beat me. There's 2 issues that kill the easy runs, one is over or under stroking the shot, the other Is hitting the ball off center of where You think you are. Sometimes I can slow play, looking straight through the ball, and still watch the roll offs take place in the oposite direction when I thought I hit dead center. This is slow play now. I'm actually better off sometimes when I hit the ball slightly harder and use english to make the pocket, even when I don't need to, then to try and hit center ball & straight angle. I do not see this as a radial issue, because those come up more often under forced shots from My experiences, and usually that's harder shooting then the shot requires to pocket the ball anyhow.
With that said- radial consistentcy is definatly a good thing, and one less issue to B&W about in Your mind, but when It really comes down, either you have It or You don't in any given night, and If Your on that night, It really does'nt matter what's in your hand as long as it feels good.
My only point here is that anything that limits inconsistencies is a good thing, but By far is It a nessesity. If someone wants to limit deflection, I would recomend they learn to play with a tighter bridge, but still stroke through it smoothly, and make sure you don't choke the bridge up too far away from the tip, as that will only increase deflection issues regardless of what shaft is used. Just my opinion, but anything that betters the odds is a good thing just the same.
Greg