Spliced points are those that are cut into the cue using V-grooves and produce the sharp ended points you see on bar type cues and most of the older cues. Floating points are put in using flat bottom pockets just like the smaller inlays in most cues are installed. You can find many at the below link that can build the type cue you want.CaptainJR said:I'm reading up on what I want in a cue stick. I came across these terms and wondered if someone could expound on them a little.
Thank you
JR
bandido said:In cuemaking, it refers to v-grooved (2 contact faces), flat bottomed (3 contact faces) or butterfly (which is a single angled contact face) main joinery of different woods in the forearm of a cue. Modern day "half splices", a term specific to cuemaking, is nothing more than an inlay even if they're v-grooved, butterfly or flat inlayed.
Edwin Reyes
classiccues said:Edwin,
I have heard you say this before. I have a question though, when the forearm of a v-splice is connected to the handle, is that not a third contact point? Also how is a floating point 3 contact surfaced when you really just have one continuous edge and the bottom?
Joe
classiccues said:Edwin,
I have heard you say this before. I have a question though, when the forearm of a v-splice is connected to the handle, is that not a third contact point? Also how is a floating point 3 contact surfaced when you really just have one continuous edge and the bottom?
Joe
WilleeCue said:A half splice is a floating inlay just like the flat bottom ones are.
WilleeCue said:I guess you could even look at the half and full splice as one continious glued edge if you wanted to.
WilleeCue said:Ok ... so what did we prove or learn from that?
bandido said:I was referring to the section that normally is refered to when splices or floating is mentioned, the forearm which is a sub-structure of the cue. If the forearm to handle joint will be considered then another contact surface is added to the numbers that I mentioned earlier. 3 for v-splice (2 long and the base to handle), 4 for flat bottom (2 sides, 1bottom and the base to handle) and 2 for butterfly( forearm to inlay and base to handle).
I'm just talking about what are refered to as "half-spliced" which are actually just inlays done in different inlaying methods.
Edwin Reyes
classiccues said:Edwin,
Also normally a floating point doesn't go through the base of the forearm therefore never adding a contact surface to the handle.
Joe
classiccues said:Technically a V-splice does touch the handle assembly so it "bottoms out" on the handle for lack of a better word. Therefore giving it a true third area of contact.
bandido said:In cuemaking, it refers to v-grooved (2 contact faces), flat bottomed (3 contact faces) or butterfly (which is a single angled contact face) main joinery of different woods in the forearm of a cue. Modern day "half splices", a term specific to cuemaking, is nothing more than an inlay even if they're v-grooved, butterfly or flat inlayed.
Floating points are so termed because the point inlays are not in intimate contact with the forearm/handle joint thus the term "floating".
Edwin Reyes
bandido said:I was referring to the section that normally is refered to when splices or floating is mentioned, the forearm which is a sub-structure of the cue. If the forearm to handle joint will be considered then another contact surface is added to the numbers that I mentioned earlier. 3 for v-splice (2 long and the base to handle), 4 for flat bottom (2 sides, 1bottom and the base to handle) and 2 for butterfly( forearm to inlay and base to handle).
I'm just talking about what are refered to as "half-spliced" which are actually just inlays done in different inlaying methods.
If we're talking main structure joinery, forearm to handle, then we do have the true v-splice, the butterfly splice and the tenon and pocket (A-joint) as the mostly used splicing (joining 2 individual parts or sub-structures to form 1) method. I've seen fingerjoints used as in Viking's and core (for the forearm) and handle as one piece.
Edwin Reyes
Huh? We're talking basic structure so that CaptainJR can understand the "basic" characteristics. Starbust? Shisheido? Those are design styles employed by the cuemaker whether they be for landed or floating points. What is being discussed here are spliced, landed points is what I call them as they're in intimate contact with the A-joint, or floating, which are not in intimate contact with the A-joint.classiccues said:Edwin,
So are you saying regardless of the shape YOU only count a floating point as 2 sides? What if the floating point is actualy a starburst shape? Or Joe Golds Shieshido design? IMHO its one edge, period. If you inlay a floating circle does it still have 2 sides, and 1 bottom?
Joe
merylane said:so in conclusion george's inlays were to the structure of his cues like floating(panto'd cnc'd) are to the structure of those cues...... nothing just decoration!!! there one is structure one is not ! what do you think joe?
merylane said:the difference i would say is spliced points done properly acually become part of the structure as a whole. QUOTE]
All inlays become part of the whole.
Perhaps some like the feel of a full spliced cue better than a half splice cue.
Others might prefer a solid but inlayed cue.
It depends a lot on what you the player like and what the cuemaker has produced.
There is no ideal cue for everyone as some like a dull feel and others prefer a more livelier feedback.
Here is what Burton Spain had to say about splices.
Refering to the possabality of a buzz developing at the glued joints he said...
"The half-spliced blank is an alligator that cant be trusted, With a full-spliced blank the source of trouble has been eleminated".
I think most modern cuemakers have learned how to deal with that problem and it should not be a problem any longer.
"A full-spliced four prong cue without veneers has more spine than a solid cue".
"The full-spliced four prong contributes to a livelier feel; like a tuning fork the butt vibrates with energy".
What about a four prong full-splice with veneers?
"It is even superior to the plain full-spliced, four prong".
Quoted from 'Making Blanks' by Burton Spain.
You can disagree with Burton Spain or you can agree with him.
What should matter most ito the player is if the cue that you hold in your hands feels right to YOU and is what YOU like in the way of weight, balance, feedback, and looks.
There is an old syaing that you got to kiss a lot of frogs just to find one prince. Finding YOUR ideal cue is a lot like that also.
merylane said:willee thats not true. a car would be of no use with out tires.if you took the inlays out you could still play pool but if you took the splice out you could not play pool.What is not true?
Everything I said, everything I quoted Burton Spain as saying, ot just one part of it?
I was just stating that a cue is the sum of all its parts.
It is what it is.
How it plays depends upon how it is made ... simple as that.
All things being the same weight and size, do you think you could tell the difference between a plain solid cue, floating point, a half splice, and a full splice cue in a blind test just by how they played? I doubt you could even tell the joint type if it were taped over. In fact there was a test done like that years ago and most people could not tell what joint was what.
If you can’t feel the difference then does it really matter?
It is all the bits and pieces together that make the hit and feel of a cue.