Curious as to why a player or cue maker chooses one over the other. Is it a subjective difference or is there a real and noticeable difference?
To me it is not so much flat faces vs. piloted as it is the material involved in the joint. Most of the time when you think piloted, you are referring to a SS joint. That can be much different then a flat faced joint that is wood to wood.
However wood to wood joints can also be piloted and there be almost no difference to a flat faced in terms of feel. Then of course you have the screw that can be SS, Titanium, phenolic and even wood in a flat faced joint. This make flat faced joints even different from each other. So there is a lot more to it then just flat faces vs piloted.
Hopefully when you see a joint on a cue makers cue it reflects some philosophy he has about the way he wants his cues to play and not just because he saw it on another cue makers cue. SW cue is a good example, they build the cues they want to build. If you asked them to make you a SS joint cue that plays like a Szamboti I would suspect they would tell you to buy a Szamboti.
Curious as to why a player or cue maker chooses one over the other. Is it a subjective difference or is there a real and noticeable difference?
I think i heard that some think that piloted joints help keep the shaft and butt lined up better than flat faced joint over time
Curious as to why a player or cue maker chooses one over the other. Is it a subjective difference or is there a real and noticeable difference?
There could be one problem. Piloted joints tend to have shorter screws then flat faced. The little insert nipple on the end of the shaft gives you another thread or two as it goes in. Also, the insert on some flat faced shaft may not catch the first thread at the beginning most part of the opening. In other words you may not have the best connection and the cue only held together by a very few threads.Tate and Cornerman's comments are the most understandable to me because in summation they are saying there isn't a functional reason if each are made at the same level of expertise. Pimarily subjective such as saying I "believe or like" one vs the other. Rather more like the reason for using one of a myriad of cue tips:"I believe this one is better vs that one" rather from any actual definable difference. The reason I posed this question for discussion is that I have ordered most all of the higly rated low deflection shafts in order to compare one vs the other. That alone is expensive enough but when you throw in different thread pitches, different size and style of pins, in addition to flat face joints vs piloted joints it becomes fully apparent that I'm sick. So as a cost saving effort I contacted the two more prominate manufacturers and asked could I order their flat faced shaft of the appropriate size and thread pitch for the cues I have which use piloted joints and whether or not I could notice any discernible difference by doing so. Both told me it would make no difference and I wouldn't be able to tell whether I was using a a piloted or flat faced shaft. Doing this allows greater flexibility for using one shaft on several different cues.
look guys i hate to burst a bubble
along time a go i beleive dan janes (joss cues)
took several cues put a paper bag around the joint (paraphrasing)
and the pros not only couldnt tell one joint from another but sometimes couldnt pick out there own cue......
most humans cant tell the difference
jmho
icbw
just sayin:grin:
look guys i hate to burst a bubble
along time a go i beleive dan janes (joss cues)
took several cues put a paper bag around the joint (paraphrasing)
and the pros not only couldnt tell one joint from another but sometimes couldnt pick out there own cue......
most humans cant tell the difference
jmho
icbw
just sayin:grin:
I can definitely tell the difference between the ping of a steel joint and the soft quiet hit of a wood to wood joint. It is far from being in my mind or my imagination. I haven't played with a steel joint cue in like 40 years. I even had a very rare ivory joint Szamboti he made me. The first time I played with a Martin cue I never went back.
On some cues such as Schuler and on many Searing cues the pilot does do something. They make full contact with the inside of the joint sleeve. On some cues made by Dennis Searing it is actually hard to put the cue together the contact is so tight.
So what you are suggesting is if everything on the cue is the same except the joint, people cannot feel a difference ?