SUGARTREE players cue. SOLID for sale

spanky981

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Awesome Sugartree cue. Solid purpleheart. and its curly purpleheart. need to move this one. It has brown colllars with nice ringwork. 2 13mm shafts. Cue is straight and weighs 19.3 and 19.4oz.. This is solid playing cue. Buyer will be very happy.. thanks Marcus or Berny for pictures.

$995 delivered...LOWERED $925 del.. lowered again. $800 del..


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I know that Eric has a softer taper on his shafts and a taper that is really stiff. I was wondering if you can tell by the hit of the cue.
 
Don't know about that ,but I read in a post when Eric make a solid cue like this he pays extra attention to the shaft wood for this reason,to get the hit right.I read it on the forum check the post for this style cue,I think the cue was for sale by someone else before and there is the info your looking for..A post by Eric... search berny 's posts
 
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I think

you are looking for this

Originally Posted by qbilder View Post
i do indeed build one piece butts. I like using purpleheart, maple & shedua. The maple & shedua need a lot of weight added & positioned properly to get a nice balance. The purpleheart doesn't need much but still requires a lot of extra work beyond the simplistic theory of building a one piece butt.

A single piece of purpleheart would be too stiff & hard, like playing with a 2x4. A single piece of maple would feel like a dud. Combined with the correct proportion, they give a perfect medium.

Again, a one piece butt can be made to play great & feel great, but there's a lot of work to it that you don't see on the outside.

When i build a solid purpleheart cue, i have to be extra picky with shafts, choosing the shafts that have a little softer & lower tone, with a little more flex than my typical shafts.
I have to choose shafts by weight that can aid in reaching the desired balance point. Without correct balance, no cue will play well no matter how great it is or who built it. And without a ton of shafts in finish size to choose from, of different qualities & different sources, then it'll be very tough for a builder to pull off a one piece butt that compares well to a 3-piece. It's a science. It's complicated. This is barely scratching the surface.

The best way i can think of to explain it is that it's easier & more efficient to build a great hitting 3-piece butt than it is to build a solid one piece butt.

It's not difficult, and there's no parts to glue together in joinery, but it requires some experience & knowledge to make it comparable to a 3-piece butt.
 
you are looking for this

Originally Posted by qbilder View Post
i do indeed build one piece butts. I like using purpleheart, maple & shedua. The maple & shedua need a lot of weight added & positioned properly to get a nice balance. The purpleheart doesn't need much but still requires a lot of extra work beyond the simplistic theory of building a one piece butt.

A single piece of purpleheart would be too stiff & hard, like playing with a 2x4. A single piece of maple would feel like a dud. Combined with the correct proportion, they give a perfect medium.

Again, a one piece butt can be made to play great & feel great, but there's a lot of work to it that you don't see on the outside.

When i build a solid purpleheart cue, i have to be extra picky with shafts, choosing the shafts that have a little softer & lower tone, with a little more flex than my typical shafts.
I have to choose shafts by weight that can aid in reaching the desired balance point. Without correct balance, no cue will play well no matter how great it is or who built it. And without a ton of shafts in finish size to choose from, of different qualities & different sources, then it'll be very tough for a builder to pull off a one piece butt that compares well to a 3-piece. It's a science. It's complicated. This is barely scratching the surface.

The best way i can think of to explain it is that it's easier & more efficient to build a great hitting 3-piece butt than it is to build a solid one piece butt.

It's not difficult, and there's no parts to glue together in joinery, but it requires some experience & knowledge to make it comparable to a 3-piece butt.

that's the one...tks
 
taper

so from the previous posts, I can guess that these shafts have a longer and or thinner taper than eric's regular shafts to offset the density of the purpleheart? or would he just use a lighter shaftwood? at almost 4oz the shafts don't sound light, unless the taper is kinda fat. i can only asssume that the hit would be the same as his other cues, otherwise he never would have sold it to anyone. i wonder if qbilder or previous owners, could shed some light on the hit of this particular cue.

all aside, a bump to the top for a nice cue!
 
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