Foolurself
Registered
What do you,as a professional,consider acceptable variation in shaft weights on a set of shafts for a new custom cue? P.S.Mistakenly posted on main forum initially
Foolurself said:What do you,as a professional,consider acceptable variation in shaft weights on a set of shafts for a new custom cue? P.S.Mistakenly posted on main forum initially
Mc2 said:So, if the shafts are matched up, what then is the reason to have two? I have been wodering this for a while. Is the reason for two shafts simple to provide a second simular shaft in case the first needs service? Or should the customer have two distincly different shafts in case the first is not shooting the way they want. I have seen players swop out shaft or even whole cues when play isn't going their way.
thanks, Jimbo.
Foolurself said:Thanks for the help,so taking my question a bit further; on really heavy shafts(4.35 oz+) with tight grain would .25 oz be acceptable considering the quality of the wood.I think(?) that the heavier shaft at 4.6 oz is a bit rare to get now.
Actually it is obviously not rare but you busted my chops for being stupid enough to post this question.You saw right through my secret plan to buy up all the Meucci and Schmelke shafts though,you clever rascal.rhncue said:Why is it rare? Using the same shaft blank you can make it into a finished shaft with up to a 1.5 oz. difference in weight just by the taper you put on. An insert adds about .4 oz. over a wood thread. Most Schmelke shafts probably weigh 4.5 to 5 oz. Do you consider them good shafts? I'm not trying to knock your shafts but just explaining why weight alone is not the ultimate consideration in the choice of a quality shaft. A great piece of Maple with a Meucci taper may weigh an ounce less than a sub-par piece with a Schmelke taper.
Using the same size shaft and taper, I try to keep both shafts under a .1 oz. difference. I never use two shafts with a difference of over .2 oz. I turn all my shaft blanks in increments and stop at 13.5mm and let them hang until needed. Since they all have the same taper at this stage, I get two shafts that weigh closely the same and then put on the deco-rings, ferrules and then make the final pass. My shaft machine leaves the shafts very smooth so very little sanding needs to be done so the final tapers are very similar on both shafts when finished.
Dick