People often claim that the shaft is responsible for draw (or English), but the shaft is usually not the root cause. For more info, see:
Regards,
Dave
PS: If you can execute a good and consistent draw shot, it is because you have a good stroke (per draw shot technique) and are achieving a low tip contact point on the CB. It ain't the shaft. Give yourself some credit.
But people can surely feel when they get more or less with one cue or the other.
Pat and I had this discussion as well and while I agree with him that IF the tip does contact the ball at EXACTLY the same position the speed/spin ratio is ALL due to the speed at which the ball is struck, we came to a tentative agreement that perhaps the people who get "more" spin using one cue vs. another are seeing that because the smaller tip/different taper might be causing the tip to actually hit the ball at a different spot. (sorry for the long sentence).
In other words a Z with a constant taper might send the tip to a lower position using the same relative address to the cueball than say a Joss shaft with a pro-taper. (whatever a pro-taper really is anyway).
I think that this is a huge part of why some cues seem to spin the ball better.
PERSONALLY though I had one major experience that makes me wonder.
Back in the mid 90's I owned a billiard supply store in Ilshofen Germany. We had more than 100 cues on the rack surrounding a Marc Lehmacher pool table. Of those cues I had two that were nearly identical in appearance BUT different in construction. Both were from an Italian cuemaker, not Longoni. One was constructed for pool with a steel pin in the butt and a shaft tapered similar to a Joss. The other was constructed for billiards with a big wood pin and a billiard cue straight taper. The pool cue had a 13mm tip and the billiard cue had an 11mm tip.
One day, playing around with trick shots I was trying the one where the cueball makes a ball and then doubles the rail all the way back down the table to make the other ball. With the pool cue I could not make this shot. I could get the cueball to double maybe twice at best.
With the billiard cue I could easily get the cue ball to double the rail two to three times every time and I could make the shot probably 3 times out of ten. I never made it with the pool cue.
So I still think that the overall construction of the cue has something to do with what it does to the ball - even when the ball is struck in the same place. How much that is I don't know.
But I lean more towards Pat's idea that the taper and "apparent" contact point has more to do with getting more or less spin on the cue ball.