The cue can be made into a two piece cue and it should still hit good provided it is done by the right cuemaker. I don't think it will have the same feedback that you now experience so you might not like it. If it ain't broke don't fix itKmack said:If I have a one piece cue that has a "special" hit/feel could it be cut and the a shaft made for use on a 2 piece cue and maintain the hit qualities?
Arnot Wadsworth said:The cue can be made into a two piece cue and it should still hit good provided it is done by the right cuemaker. I don't think it will have the same feedback that you now experience so you might not like it. If it ain't broke don't fix it![]()
Kmack said:Thanks for the answers. The cue is a Valley brand $15.00 house cue for my table at home but for whatever reason it just works for me. I was hoping I could make it more portable.
Kmack said:If I have a one piece cue that has a "special" hit/feel could it be cut and the a shaft made for use on a 2 piece cue and maintain the hit qualities?
Arnot Wadsworth said:<The cuemaker could screw the shaft on carefully before the maple plug is completely set to see how the grain lines line up and possibly make an adjustment if he/she felt that effort would be worth it. It might be easier to do that if the plug was only a snug fit and glued rather than treaded (the part sticking out of the butt that fit into the shaft would still be threaded ofcourse), that way the plug could easily be rotated so the grain lines match up.>
That sounds good but that is not the way we do it here. After everything is made, the glue has cured etc., we face the shaft until it lands correctly.