My Day With Bob Meucci, One of the World's "Good Guys"

Bob Meucci is related to the man that REALLY invented the telephone....go figure

Seems like this should be 2 threads and I'm only going to respond to the Bob thread... I'll happily jump on a China bashing thread but not over labor.

I have personally had a great experience with Bob that I can attest to and, based on only on that limited knowledge, I found him to be a great guy. His whole family is highly intelligent and interesting. I started a web site to independently test and post on cue performance. Bob found it and invited me to his shop, at his expense, to see how his robot worked and talk to him about it. I spent several hours using his robot, touring the factory and talking with them. Unfortunately my own robot had too much wood in it and I balked at continuing to dump money into it in order to get the reliability necessary (and anything less was not acceptable).

Bob has many inventions and is worth getting to know. He is a very entrepreneurial person and even ran several ideas for pool by me during the visit. If he made the cue then I would have no doubt it is a great cue. My first league cue was a Meucci and it played very well - bought it around 1994. At the time you couldn't get a low deflection cue as cheap anywhere else and only Predator was even in the game at that point.

Craig



Yes, Bob has always been a pioneer in the pool cue industry. It's amazing to me that after 50 years he's still in the spotlight and considered one of the best, even with all the over seas competition.

Bob's also related to the man that REALLY invented the telephone, check this out: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/jun/17/humanities.internationaleducationnews


Bell did not invent telephone, US rules
Scot accused of finding fame by stealing Italian's ideas
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Rory Carroll in Rome
The Guardian, Monday 17 June 2002 06.14 EDT
Italy hailed the redress of a historic injustice yesterday after the US Congress recognised an impoverished Florentine immigrant as the inventor of the telephone rather than Alexander Graham Bell.
Historians and Italian-Americans won their battle to persuade Washington to recognise a little-known mechanical genius, Antonio Meucci, as a father of modern communications, 113 years after his death.


The vote by the House of Representatives prompted joyous claims in Meucci's homeland that finally Bell had been outed as a perfidious Scot who found fortune and fame by stealing another man's work.

Calling the Italian's career extraordinary and tragic, the resolution said his "teletrofono", demonstrated in New York in 1860, made him the inventor of the telephone in the place of Bell, who had access to Meucci's materials and who took out a patent 16 years later.

"It is the sense of the House of Representatives that the life and achievements of Antonio Meucci should be recognised, and his work in the invention of the telephone should be acknowledged," the resolution stated.

Bell's immortalisation in books and films has rankled with generations of Italians who know Meucci's story. Born in 1808, he studied design and mechanical engineering at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence, and as a stage technician at the city's Teatro della Pergola developed a primitive system to help colleagues communicate.

In the 1830s he moved to Cuba and, while working on methods to treat illnesses with electric shocks, found that sounds could travel by electrical impulses through copper wire. Sensing potential, he moved to Staten Island, near New York City, in 1850 to develop the technology.

When Meucci's wife, Ester, became paralysed he rigged a system to link her bedroom with his neighbouring workshop and in 1860 held a public demonstration which was reported in New York's Italian-language press.

In between giving shelter to political exiles, Meucci struggled to find financial backing, failed to master English and was severely burned in an accident aboard a steamship.

Forced to make new prototype telephones after Ester sold his machines for $6 to a secondhand shop, his models became more sophisticated. An inductor formed around an iron core in the shape of a cylinder was a technique so sophisticated that it was used decades later for long-distance connections.

Meucci could not afford the $250 needed for a definitive patent for his "talking telegraph" so in 1871 filed a one-year renewable notice of an impending patent. Three years later he could not even afford the $10 to renew it.

He sent a model and technical details to the Western Union telegraph company but failed to win a meeting with executives. When he asked for his materials to be returned, in 1874, he was told they had been lost. Two years later Bell, who shared a laboratory with Meucci, filed a patent for a telephone, became a celebrity and made a lucrative deal with Western Union.

Meucci sued and was nearing victory - the supreme court agreed to hear the case and fraud charges were initiated against Bell - when the Florentine died in 1889. The legal action died with him.

Yesterday the newspaper La Repubblica welcomed the vote to recognise the Tuscan inventor as a belated comeuppance for Bell, a "cunning Scotsman" and "usurper" whose per- fidy built a communications empire.


G
 
Wow, a thread that started out positive and quickly turned to sh!t.
You hardly ever see that happen here.
 
Wow, a thread that started out positive and quickly turned to sh!t.
You hardly ever see that happen here.

What's even more sad is that when I read the title of the thread, I already knew what was about to happen, its that predictable.
 
Nice story CJ!

Anybody talking about "what former employees are saying" should run a business for awhile. If you try to do everything necessary to make everyone happy, you'll be out of business rather quickly. Many people envision themselves as Executive material while having a horrible attitude, work ethic and minimal capabilities.

What's with the "hate China" thing? Working conditions in the USA, in the early 20th century, were much worse than China is now. That's about where China is at with their own industrial revolution. It is an evolutionary situation. Keep in mind the vast majority of jobs that have gone to China are jobs nobody here wanted to do. You personally have a huge problem with Chinese made products? Easy solution. Quit buying them. Of course that means you'll be without a tv, computer, cell phone, car, etc..

BTW, for many larger companies, their primary reason for establishing manufacturing in China has been to create a presence in the Chinese market. Almost 2 billion potential consumers. China is where Japan was in the 1970 time frame. Look at Japan now, many of their labor rates are higher than the USA.
 
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Bob Meucci is related to the man that REALLY invented the telephone....go figure

double post
 
Too funny. He loves that telephone invention story.. told it to me as well more than 10 years ago.
 
I would certainly watch it just to see the "showdown".

What's even more sad is that when I read the title of the thread, I already knew what was about to happen, its that predictable.

It's not random, there's always a percentage of the "Good, Bad and the Ugly".....I wonder how Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef would have done in a pool movie? I would certainly watch it just to see the "showdown".
Once-Upon-A-Time-In-The-West-3.jpg
 
Yes, I had to chase her through 3 farms, over 5 fences, around 7 John Deere Tractors, and finally found her playing in someone's garden.

She runs fast for a "stuffed animal".

389591_445597655466276_277893987_n.jpg

Too funny. That looks like dog heaven, right there!!

Nice thread. Thanks for your contributions.

td
 
In the early 80s I lived in Southhaven MS, wanted to buy a cue so I called Bob and went down to his factory in Ms at the time. He spent at least 3 hours with me walking me thru the place and explaining everything that goes into make a cue. He was great. I told him I was ready to buy a cue,and he said to call one of his distributors in Memphis, I did and bought a cue the next day. Very nice experience. My history with Bob has been great. Tom
 
I use a Meucci PP 1. I have a multitude of nice production cues and a few customs but I always seem to come back to my old faithful.

Just one of those things I would guess. Put one of Dawgs Duds on her and she is a great player.

Never had one problem with it and one that I would not consider selling.

So far this year, it has been with me for 3 league tourney wins. Last night my wife and myself were playing the final of Spring League Scotch. We won our first set and came up against the team that put us on the one loss side. We had to beat them twice. We won the first set and they asked if we would consider splitting first and second payouts and be done with it. We split and called it a night.

She be a winning cue. Once you get used to the Black Dot shaft, it can do some amazing things. I have a shaft that I am just finishing up on. I tapered it as close to the Black Dot shaft as I could and hope it plays half as well.
 
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From 1975-1989, if you didn't have a Meucci, you were at a big disadvantage in 9 ball. Straight pool I prefer a Joss or Schon.

I have read some questionable silliness over the years here but this one has to be top ten. "From 1975-1989, if you didn't have a Meucci, you were at a big disadvantage in 9 ball"

Really? How so?

Nick
 
Wow, a thread that started out positive and quickly turned to sh!t.
You hardly ever see that happen here.

What's shitty about it? All sorts of education happening in this thread. Innovation, invention, intention, hospitality, employee relations, sponsoring, gambling, dog chases, globalization, slavery, everything you need to know about the world rolled into one thread and we still haven't seen a picture of CJ's new wonder cue!!!!

:-)
 
we have a local television station here that has a show called Tennessee crossroads. the show is about people , places or businesses of interest in Tennessee. a few years ago they did a show about bob meucci.

they taped him playing some pool. I wont say he is another mike massey but some shots he made were simply amazing. one in particular stands out in my mind. picture this in your mind if you can. the cue ball is hanging in the top right corner pocket. the 9 ball is about 4" dead in front of it. the 8 ball is about 6" in front of the 9 ball. bob jacks up and jumps the 9 ball pocketing the 8 ball in the bottom left corner and the cue ball draws back and pockets the 9. this was with a full cue, not a jump cue. this was done with a cue hanging on the wall on a table that is set up in his display room in the front of his shop.

trick shots are fun:

I have visited his shop a couple of times. one time bob was there and was friendly as heck with me. he gave me a tour of the shop in back" did not look like any slave labor was going on back there to me".

Plse don't confuse me w/anyone that stated or insinuated that there was any semblence of "slave labor" in the Meucci
shop
.

he actually treated me like a long lost friend. we talked for about 2 hours about everything under the sun almost.

I will agree that for a while his cues were not exactly up to par with what they used to make but I honestly think he has been trying to turn it around lately.

good......
 
Can run out. Bob stopped by my booth one year and we shot a few games and then he showed me his way of calculating masse' shots. Which I didn't retain unfortunately since my mind was half on the booth.

Ah sooo, divergent opinions in defining "can play".

To me a hundred ball runner @ 14-1 and/or someone capable of stacking 5+ racks on a big table "can play" whereas "can run out" is a non-definitive, nebulous statement, although, someone who gets out EVERY time he's supposed to is a stone cold champion (imo) capable of giving the OP the 8 @ a minimum
 
Ah sooo, divergent opinions in defining "can play".

To me a hundred ball runner @ 14-1 and/or someone capable of stacking 5+ racks on a big table "can play" whereas "can run out" is a non-definitive, nebulous statement, although, someone who gets out EVERY time he's supposed to is a stone cold champion (imo) capable of giving the OP the 8 @ a minimum

I would not know if Bob could play championship or shortstop speed but to me he can certainly handle his cue proficiently.

And he hit every masse shot he showed me as called. Impressive enough for me.
 
I would not know if Bob could play championship or shortstop speed but to me he can certainly handle his cue proficiently.

decent apa sl 7, perhaps

And he hit every masse shot he showed me as called. Impressive enough for me.

also possessed world class draw stroke which he readily displayed
 
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