I know this has been discussed before. But I just dont get it. How can two shafts with the same tip hit totally different.
I have a James White cue that has a 314 shaft matched up to it. My back up shaft for this setup is a 314 shaft that was matched up for a Runde. Both shafts were matched up by the cuemaker.
I recently had moori mediums put on each shaft. (by different repairman-both highly regarded by me)
One shaft hit substantially better. It has the "pong" hit that I must have. The only way I can describe it is the feel of ivory ferrules. Y'know when it is hitting really good. It just pongs.
Same 314 blanks. Same moori tips.
Does the glue impact the way the tip hits, vibrates, feels?
Both tips look great. Not loose that I can tell. I assume both are real moori's.
I hate to yank off the tip that has a clack to it. $20 down the drain and another $20 for the new tip gets old.
Any advice? Besides stay away from 314 shafts
Mike Athens
I have a James White cue that has a 314 shaft matched up to it. My back up shaft for this setup is a 314 shaft that was matched up for a Runde. Both shafts were matched up by the cuemaker.
I recently had moori mediums put on each shaft. (by different repairman-both highly regarded by me)
One shaft hit substantially better. It has the "pong" hit that I must have. The only way I can describe it is the feel of ivory ferrules. Y'know when it is hitting really good. It just pongs.
Same 314 blanks. Same moori tips.
Does the glue impact the way the tip hits, vibrates, feels?
Both tips look great. Not loose that I can tell. I assume both are real moori's.
I hate to yank off the tip that has a clack to it. $20 down the drain and another $20 for the new tip gets old.
Any advice? Besides stay away from 314 shafts
Mike Athens