I was playing with a friend last night who was using his new Schon cue and when I asked him how he was liking it, he said he didn't really. When I asked why, he said he said he couldn't make a ball using any english. So, while we played he let me use his cue. I don't know the model number, but it's around $1200, so whatever family of cues that falls into. To be fair, he's not really a student of the game and just kinda fell into this cue for a pretty good price. It's brand new.
After quickly browsing the Schon site, it looks most like the STL-15 from what I can remember. If that helps.
Right off the bat, I notice the shaft has a straight taper (I think that's the term), looks almost like a 3C shaft. Seems to have a pretty stiff hit, compared to my very flexy lucasi shaft that is). But I noticed it actually deflects a measurable amount more than my shaft. We were playing on a bar table, so there wasn't too much distance, but for example, look at this layout:
I had to aim to the 6 ball dead straight into the rail to account for the deflection in order to cut the ball in with high-inside english. The blue line is my aim line, the red line is the resulting path.
With my cue, which has a pro taper, I still have to aim pretty full, but not *that* full for that shot.
I was just wondering if this is the reason why most of the people I know with Schons have bought aftermarket shafts?
Also, do you know what the default tip is for Schons - it's harder than he prefers, but I couldn't remember what they use - and how much, if any, would that come into the deflection equation?
The good news is that is really like the ping of this cue - loud and clear indicator of whether or not I stroked it or poked it.
After quickly browsing the Schon site, it looks most like the STL-15 from what I can remember. If that helps.
Right off the bat, I notice the shaft has a straight taper (I think that's the term), looks almost like a 3C shaft. Seems to have a pretty stiff hit, compared to my very flexy lucasi shaft that is). But I noticed it actually deflects a measurable amount more than my shaft. We were playing on a bar table, so there wasn't too much distance, but for example, look at this layout:
I had to aim to the 6 ball dead straight into the rail to account for the deflection in order to cut the ball in with high-inside english. The blue line is my aim line, the red line is the resulting path.
With my cue, which has a pro taper, I still have to aim pretty full, but not *that* full for that shot.
I was just wondering if this is the reason why most of the people I know with Schons have bought aftermarket shafts?
Also, do you know what the default tip is for Schons - it's harder than he prefers, but I couldn't remember what they use - and how much, if any, would that come into the deflection equation?
The good news is that is really like the ping of this cue - loud and clear indicator of whether or not I stroked it or poked it.
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