flat doesn't usually work
Flat doesn't usually work for people, I suspect because with usage the tip actually gets a little dented or concave and then you have to hit in one perfect spot. The low crown gives you the most margin of error, which is still very little.
The parabolic taper means that instead of a single curve near the joint you have an "S" curve. This somewhat resembles the top half of a coca-cola bottle before it starts tapering back smaller. This can add a lot of stiffness or spine to a shaft.
"Pro taper" is usually taken to mean no taper, a straight cylinder for that part of the shaft. In reality it seems most cue makers put a slight taper on this section for several very good reasons. It does increase stiffness but equally important is that it insures the shaft flexes as it should. Think of a fishing rod that flexes more near the tip and gradually flexes less and less as it goes back, then think if the fishing rod quit tapering or even started tapering back slightly larger about halfway up the fishing rod. With a perfectly straight pro section on a cue shaft normal usage, cleaning, and burnishing creates a bottle neck in the pro section over time.
If you are buying from an established cue maker he has settled on a shaft taper that works for his customers and himself. It may not have the parabolic taper I favor however there are other ways to skin that cat so don't worry about anything other than how the shaft hits for you. Typically a shaft built for a break shaft will not be quite as lively as a playing shaft, meaning you don't get as much vibration and feedback as with your playing shaft. the phenolic tip gives a ton of feedback and may counteract the lack of feedback in the shaft or it may not.
The break shaft should feel a little different from the playing shaft in my opinion because the primary goals are different. It is rarely productive to get very far from a center ball hit with a break cue and if you are hitting very far from center it is almost certainly at reduced speed at which time I would recommend breaking with your playing cue for increased control.
Hope I covered your post and PM here, if not feel free to ask further here or PM again.
Hu
thank you and well ive been thinking if im going to use it to break only and well its going to have a phenolic tip i might play it pretty flat just to increase the sweet spot and get a solder hit. would a flat tip do that?
Flat doesn't usually work for people, I suspect because with usage the tip actually gets a little dented or concave and then you have to hit in one perfect spot. The low crown gives you the most margin of error, which is still very little.
The parabolic taper means that instead of a single curve near the joint you have an "S" curve. This somewhat resembles the top half of a coca-cola bottle before it starts tapering back smaller. This can add a lot of stiffness or spine to a shaft.
"Pro taper" is usually taken to mean no taper, a straight cylinder for that part of the shaft. In reality it seems most cue makers put a slight taper on this section for several very good reasons. It does increase stiffness but equally important is that it insures the shaft flexes as it should. Think of a fishing rod that flexes more near the tip and gradually flexes less and less as it goes back, then think if the fishing rod quit tapering or even started tapering back slightly larger about halfway up the fishing rod. With a perfectly straight pro section on a cue shaft normal usage, cleaning, and burnishing creates a bottle neck in the pro section over time.
If you are buying from an established cue maker he has settled on a shaft taper that works for his customers and himself. It may not have the parabolic taper I favor however there are other ways to skin that cat so don't worry about anything other than how the shaft hits for you. Typically a shaft built for a break shaft will not be quite as lively as a playing shaft, meaning you don't get as much vibration and feedback as with your playing shaft. the phenolic tip gives a ton of feedback and may counteract the lack of feedback in the shaft or it may not.
The break shaft should feel a little different from the playing shaft in my opinion because the primary goals are different. It is rarely productive to get very far from a center ball hit with a break cue and if you are hitting very far from center it is almost certainly at reduced speed at which time I would recommend breaking with your playing cue for increased control.
Hope I covered your post and PM here, if not feel free to ask further here or PM again.
Hu