breakshot said:
I don't know why it would be important for a cue to take such a strain laterally, I can't think of any type of stroke which would repeat those kind of forces. As far as I know all of the force generated from a pool stroke is felt by the cue longitudally.
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As far as air tight, are you saying that if you submerged the cue under water, that the cue would not absorb any water, if that is true then it would be air tight (similar to and air tight submarine) and no humidity or moisture would get in
This reminds me of about 16 years ago, when a kid in the pool room had a brand new Meucci, and he had been playing with it for like a week.
He took a shot, and as body english would have it, was so intent on if the ball was going into the hole or not, he took a step backwards, and the top of the shaft hit that square air vent duct thing that you see on ceilings.
It wasn't that hard, and it might have been at a turtles pace, but the cue SPLIT IN HALF at the forearm above the wrap, which exposed a huge hollow section that was there where it was cored.
Sure, cues aren't supposed to be taking lateral stress, but this was literally nothing. You might drop your cue on a table after a shot and have 10 times the force generated then it took to break this cue.
I don't think ANYONE in the room bought a Meucci after that.
Now compare that to a Black Boar, and it's 2 different worlds.
I'd be willing to say that if i wanted, and i took my nephew to the park and he pitched a couple of baseballs to me, that i might be able to knock a couple of them out of the park with the cue.
The vibrations might loosen a point, or the force of the blow might somehow torque a point loose, but i dare say that for the most part, the cue would still be structurally sound.
One is way WAY more structurally sound then the other.
Heck, i remember a guy who had a Phillippe where somehow it came apart at the joint where the handle meets the forearm, and the only thing holding it together was this small piece of wood that looked like a football lengthwise, and that looked like a cross when you looked at the cross section.
It might have been the weakest way to attach the forearm to the handle that i have ever seen.
Sure it made balls in the hole, but it was just WEAK in other ways.
So as far as points go, cues with deep knifed points are going to be more structurally sound for the length of the point.
Just like in Black Boars case, the point goes beyond the forearm and under the wrap area.
But Szamboti's points, which are also deep knifed, go only as far as the bottom edge of the forearm, and then that is subsequently attached to the handle by some method.
But everyone is different, and i highly doubt that if a cue hits great regardless of how it is constructed, that anyone is going to make that big of a deal out of it.
I've played with junk that played fantastic, and high end stuff that played like junk, so it's all relative.