She can chalk my tip anytime!!

She can chalk my tip anytime!!

Well, yes, the entire cues were tested. But that's what you're really interested in. The bounce height (percentage) will tell you what fraction of the energy will be transferred to the cue ball.I'm not sure that you've tested here the cues but rather the tips.
To messure the shafts, they should be mounted with the same tip that is shaped the same and to the same hight. and I would do it without the butt or use the same butt.
From an earlier post of yours about this:Well, yes, the entire cues were tested. But that's what you're really interested in. The bounce height (percentage) will tell you what fraction of the energy will be transferred to the cue ball.
Break cues have very hard tips because it turns out that hard tips lose less energy during the collision so more energy gets into the cue ball. It seems that something like a superball could be even better, but that has never worked out.
For the no-bounce shaft, I wonder how it would test on the cue stick in the bounce test. To test it with shots on the table, I think two comparison shots against a similar standard cue would be useful:
I think the bounce test with a full cue will give some bounce with the no-bounce shaft.
- straight up and down the table for distance (or a break shot with a speed measurement of some kind)
- shooting straight up the center of the table to see how large an angle you can get off the end rail with maximum side spin
This is mostly unrelated to the OP's question, and if he wants to test cues, the bounce test with the full cue or a break speed measurement is the way to go. A factor that the bounce test does not measure is whether the balance of the weight in the cue suits the player.
Do you know your break speed? I would start there, my break speed is a paltry 14mph, some pro's break at twice that speed, so I might as well quit right? Nope, speed x mass = force, if you add weight and maintain your speed you increase your power, I added 5.5 ozs to my break cue, it is now 24.5 ozs, BCA allows up to 25 ozs, is my break better? Yes, way better, is it at pro level, no, probably will never be but not every player has an SVB break.my main concern is maximum power for breaking 8 ball head on. A low-deflection shaft, be it carbon or wood, inherently has less power than a shaft not designed to have give. I’ve used some thicker-walled carbon shafts that deflected quite a bit but were much more powerful than a bk rush for example.
Cues and shafts do not have power, they transfer power, I find most CF shafts transfer power more efficiently than most wood shafts but this is not always true, the important thing to remember is it's the Indian not the arrow, uncontrolled power is not going to help.I'm looking for a power-breaking shaft and would like a thicker walled carbon shaft, not low-deflection carbon break shaft with less power. Any recommendations? Thanks
Predator makes a Revo Carom shaft that is explicitly matched in deflection to a standard wood shaft, which most of the carom players have been used to for decades. The low deflection craze had not made it to Carom games when the Revo Carom was introduced. Thus, Predator has a standard deflection Revo Carom, and a low deflection Revo Carom.I'm looking for a power-breaking shaft and would like a thicker walled carbon shaft, not low-deflection carbon break shaft with less power. Any recommendations? Thanks