I think these points are a departure from what the majority are complaining about: that they thought Jack was making them, but in fact other people were contracted to make them.One thing I think you fail to take into account is the "build quality", or lack thereof, of the Jackpot cues.
Schmelke makes a good cue - at their particular low price point.
But no one in their right mind would put the build quality of a Schmelke cue as being on a par with, let's say, Johnny Sanchez of Libra Cues.
We can all agree that how a cue plays can be very subjective, but a big part of the deception was the Jackpot cues were sold as not only well-designed, but as extremely well-made custom cues.
As we know, this is not the case.
Funny you should use the 1980's McDermott cues as a comparison. Do you think the Jackpot cues will hold together just as well 30 years from now? I sure don't.
And I won't even mention the "value" of a Jackpot cue should someone attempt to resell one.![]()
I have an 80's McDermott shaft that fell apart. I have also one from the 80's that is a prized treasure. I don't know who got their Jackpot cue for resale value.
Until I heard of Jack Potter on AZ and Libra Cues, I had no idea what a Libra Cue was. I still don't. It's not important to me. I can't speak to why anyone else got one of these cues.