Richard helmstetter????

cue fix

Will "MONSOON" & SEARING!
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Did Richard Helmstetter make custom cues before starting Adam Cues? If so, How do you identify a custom made Helmstetter from production models? Also, How come you cannot find any contact info on Mr. Helmstetter? Just an inquiring mind that would like to know.
 
Did Richard Helmstetter make custom cues before starting Adam Cues? If so, How do you identify a custom made Helmstetter from production models? Also, How come you cannot find any contact info on Mr. Helmstetter? Just an inquiring mind that would like to know.

To my knowledge Richard Helmstetter started making custom cues and selling them at Tournaments like the Jansco Brothers Jamborees in Johnson City Illinois in the Mid-1960's. Because he was becoming a well know cue maker, he was hired by The National Chalk and Billiard company in 1968 to set up their cue making operations. Then in 1970 he went to Japan to set up Adams cue making operations.

I have never seen a Helmstetter cue from the time before he worked for National (1968). I also have never heard of any catalogs of his cues before Adam Custom Cues.

I hope some one posts a photo of an early Helmstetter cue, by the way I think this is great idea for a thread, good job!!!!:)
 
Did Richard Helmstetter make custom cues before starting Adam Cues? If so, How do you identify a custom made Helmstetter from production models? Also, How come you cannot find any contact info on Mr. Helmstetter? Just an inquiring mind that would like to know.

I think his contact point these days would be with Callaway Golf Products, where I believe his title is head of research and development. He invented the Big Bertha clubs for Callaway and many other products -- so many that they named their new R&D center after him.
 
Richard Helmstetter did make many prototype cues and experimented with different joints and aesthetic approaches. Some of his cues are signed and I would use that as an initial guide.

As far as contact info, you could try Richard Black. They are friends. A more remote possibility would be checking the organizational listings for Callaway Golf where he at one time was in R and D or New Product Development.

I met him for the first time at the ACA hall of fame dinner this year. He's an interesting person and he took time to talk to me. Too cool.
 
This 2005 press release from Callaway Golf tells about Helmstetter's career at the company. He must be some kind of genius.

CARLSBAD, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 29, 2005--Callaway Golf Company (NYSE:ELY) today announced that Richard C. Helmstetter will continue his longstanding relationship with the Company as a key consultant reporting directly to the CEO. Mr. Helmstetter, a golf industry icon and legendary club designer, whose inventions include the revolutionary Big Bertha Driver, will immediately assume his new role with the Company.

"I am honored and very pleased that Mr. Helmstetter will continue to work with me and Callaway Golf in this important role over the next ten years," said George Fellows, President and Chief Executive Officer. "Dick has made many very significant contributions to this company and to golf in general, and I strongly believe that he still has a great deal to contribute."

Mr. Helmstetter joined Callaway Golf in 1986. He has served in a number of leadership roles, including Chief of New Products. Most recently he has directed the Company's international operations. In 1998, founder Ely Callaway and Mr. Helmstetter agreed to a long-term arrangement that contemplated this transition to a consulting role to assure that the Company and Mr. Helmstetter would always maintain their close and valuable ties. In accord with the terms of the 1998 agreement, the terms of the new consulting agreement will become effective December 1, 2005, although Mr. Helmstetter's duties will be changing immediately.

"Richard Helmstetter is a visionary in golf, and we are pleased and grateful that he will be continuing to devote his talents to the benefit of Callaway Golf," said Ronald S. Beard, Chairman. "RCH and the Company are facing an exciting future together."

Through an unwavering commitment to innovation, Callaway Golf creates products and services designed to make every golfer a better golfer. Callaway Golf Company manufactures and sells golf clubs and golf balls, and sells golf accessories, under the Callaway Golf(R), Top-Flite(R), Odyssey(R) and Ben Hogan(R) brands. For more information, visit www.callawaygolf.com.
 
This excerpt from the Bluebook gives a history of Helmstetter's cuemaking days.

Maker of pool cues from 1970 to present in Japan. Distributed in the United States by Competition Sports of Farmingdale, New York.
In 1960 Richard Helmstetter made his first cue in a night school woodworking class. Shortly afterwards, Richard heard about a cuemaker named Rollie Welch, and soon he was on a bus to North Milwaukee. On Friday nights after his classes were over, Richard made shafts for Rollie in exchange for the use of Rollie´s lathe. Later in the weekend Richard could work on his own cues; he bought Brunswick one-piece cues, cut them in half, and put in a joint. It was at this time that Richard met Gordon Hart, who wanted to set up a cue shop in the basement of his new pool room in Stoughton, Wisconsin. A deal was struck: if Richard helped Gordon set up the shop, Richard would have a "permanent" part-time job there while he finished his degree at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

In 1965, Richard took an armload of cues to the annual Johnson City tournament and sold every one of them. It was in Johnson City that he heard about a fellow in Chicago building quality blanks. Soon Gordon and Richard were buying blanks from this man, Burton Spain, to use in their cues. After graduating from college in 1966, Richard moved to Washington, D.C. to start Helmstetter Cues. (Gordon Hart went on to establish Viking Cues.) His namesake company established Richard´s reputation as an accomplished craftsman. A year later Richard was offered the opportunity to set up a cuemaking facility for the National Tournament Chalk Company in Chicago. With the combined talents of Richard and other soon-to-be-important cuemakers, National was making high quality cues.

In 1968, Richard met Dave Forman, who was importing two lines of cues which he manufactured in Japan. Dave enlisted Richard to improve and expand his Japanese cuemaking facility. In October of 1969, Richard moved to Japan to begin this project. Richard bought new machinery for the facility and had kilns custom made for drying wood. Two years later, Adam Custom Cues was born, named after Dave Forman´s first grandson. The twelve models available in 1970 were entirely handmade. By 1973, 60 models were available. Now that Adam-Japan produces thousands of cues a year, the cues are built using state-of-the-art machinery. Adam is now using sixth generation equipment. Some early prototype cues are still handmade.

Richard started producing wood-screw billiard cues during the 1970s, which soon became popular with the world´s leading three-cushion billiards players. From the mid-1970s until the early 1990s, the Carl Conlon and CCS ("Carl Conlon Special") and Adam/CCS carom cues were sold in Europe. In 1976, Adam Custom Cues successfully introduced the John Spencer and Harry Harbottle ("HH") lines of snooker cues. Other lines manufactured by Adam over the past 30 years include Julio Stamboulini, Raymond Calvert, Bob Weir, Buffalo, By Helmstetter, Lisciotti, and the Superstar Signature Series-all of which are easily identifiable by visible logos and/or signatures, and are discontinued. "Bob Weir" cues were a private label Adam production cue made for a Texan by that name whose only brush with cuemaking was designing the "flying W" logo embossed on the cues. According to Richard, they were made for three to four years in the 1980s; fewer than 1000 cues were imported from Japan to Texas. Currently Adam-Japan manufactures three lines of cues: Adam, Helmstetter, and the George Balabushka series. The Balabushka cues are made by Adam under license from the Balabushka family in designs similar to what George himself might have made before he passed on in 1975. If your cue has "George Balabushka" on the forearm, it was made by Adam-Japan. These cues are now distributed by Competition Sports Corp.

Despite his status as a seminal figure in cuemaking, Richard Helmstetter is best known for his contributions to the golf world. He returned to live in the United States in 1986, when he joined Callaway Golf, where he is Senior Executive Vice President and Chief of New Products. Richard is the creator of the famed "Big Bertha" driver and Fairway Woods. He still continues to do cue design work for Adam-Japan. Richard´s world travels and product development contacts at Callaway have proven helpful to Adam, from sourcing woods to discovering new high-tech materials and machinery.

Collectors are becoming interested in many of the early Adam and Helmstetter cues, particularly those with wood screws. If you have an Adam cue that needs further identification or repair, contact Competition Sports, listed in the Trademark Index.

For more information, please refer to listings for Julio Stambolini Cues, and Bob Weir Cues.
 
Did Richard Helmstetter make custom cues before starting Adam Cues? If so, How do you identify a custom made Helmstetter from production models? Also, How come you cannot find any contact info on Mr. Helmstetter? Just an inquiring mind that would like to know.

You could try reaching him through the Callaway Golf company, where he is apparently still a consultant, or the Adam Cue Company. I don't know if he still has an affiliation with Adam, but they would know how to reach him. It's doubtful that they would give you a phone number or email, but I assume they would forward a letter.

He doesn't personally make cues anymore, of course, and hasn't for many years. He must be a very rich man.
 
Interesting

A friend popped in tonight at the pool room with a new cue...A Helmstetter.
I told him what I knew(very little) and that I would find out what I could.
Then I log on and this thread is on the main page.

Never knew that he was involved in Golf. Big invention with the Big Bertha!! :grin:
 
Interesting

A friend popped in tonight at the pool room with a new cue...A Helmstetter.
I told him what I knew(very little) and that I would find out what I could.
Then I log on and this thread is on the main page.

Never knew that he was involved in Golf. Big invention with the Big Bertha!! :grin:

I love google
 
Richard didnt start Adams...Dave Forman did (RIP).....Richard was a part of the company as a engineer so to speak to help with desighnes and building of cues, he made a nice cue also..in Japan........he made cues before becoming affiliated with them.
 
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Last time I spoke with Richard Black about Helmstetter I was informed that both Richard and his wife were very ill.

He made a few cues, set up tooling for cue making and was a little active before going to Japan.

Kevin
 
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