After watching (too) many hours of currently ongoing Snooker world championships I have noticed that I give quite a lot of focus for the sound the tip and the cue makes when a player strikes the ball. A good example is Ding, the sound his cue makes on contact is pure sweetness to my ears, a clear yet subtle thump sound, the sound of a pure contact. Or Murphy, that man sure knows how to hit a ball pure.
This makes me wonder, what are the factors of a cues sound, apart from the obvious tip and technique when it comes to cue sports? Is the wood used a big factor here? I have never been able to play with a good ash snooker cue so I cant tell by myself.
I would love to be able to recreate that sound to one of my cues. I know that I am no where near as skilled and technically pure as the top snooker players are and that the games of pool and snooker are totally different animals with different size of balls and all.
What would you recommend for a tip to get that sweet sound out of a hit and what do snooker pros use on their cues?
I like Kamui tips for playability and I'm not going to try to find a "better" tip, I just want to get that sound out for an extra shaft of wich I have several lying around unused. A few schons and a 314´2, tiger ultra x ld and soon a wx700 too that comes with a Mezz sneaky I ordered a while back
I feel that Elkmaster sounds too muted compared to what im looking. Kamui Medium has a distinct ping when struck, soft is closer but that lacks the pureness of sound due to being rather soft (meh, a bit hard to describe, especially in a foreign language :grin
LePro is also a bit too "thud", its something a little firmer I am looking for.
I have read a lot of good about G2 tips and Zans, maybe theres something to try in their list of tips worth trying out
Feel free to discuss, does the sound matter to you, what kind of sound you like on contact, is sound just an unnecessary stimulant.
This makes me wonder, what are the factors of a cues sound, apart from the obvious tip and technique when it comes to cue sports? Is the wood used a big factor here? I have never been able to play with a good ash snooker cue so I cant tell by myself.
I would love to be able to recreate that sound to one of my cues. I know that I am no where near as skilled and technically pure as the top snooker players are and that the games of pool and snooker are totally different animals with different size of balls and all.
What would you recommend for a tip to get that sweet sound out of a hit and what do snooker pros use on their cues?
I like Kamui tips for playability and I'm not going to try to find a "better" tip, I just want to get that sound out for an extra shaft of wich I have several lying around unused. A few schons and a 314´2, tiger ultra x ld and soon a wx700 too that comes with a Mezz sneaky I ordered a while back

I feel that Elkmaster sounds too muted compared to what im looking. Kamui Medium has a distinct ping when struck, soft is closer but that lacks the pureness of sound due to being rather soft (meh, a bit hard to describe, especially in a foreign language :grin

I have read a lot of good about G2 tips and Zans, maybe theres something to try in their list of tips worth trying out

Feel free to discuss, does the sound matter to you, what kind of sound you like on contact, is sound just an unnecessary stimulant.