I have no idea who the customer or the cue maker is, but I don't blame the them for not bringing you any more work. I doubt you expressed your feelings about the cue, while he was standing in front of you, as eloquently as you did here.
How would you feel if you brought the cue in that you just received only to have somebody who doesn't even build cues tell you it's a piece of junk?
Coming on here and bashing another cue maker makes it seem like you are jealous of him in my opinion. If he's truly a "big name" cue maker, as you put it, I doubt he got there by accident. If you're so much better than he is, then why aren't you making cues?
Not every cue is going to be perfect. An off center pin doesn't make the entire cue a piece of kindling.
When I first started building cues, I used to look at cues by some cue makers and wonder why they are getting the money they are getting. I thought to myself that my cues were just as good as theirs. Now I look at the same cue makers cues and understand why they're getting the money they are. Their cues were better then mine back then and they still are today. They deserve the money they are getting. They've worked hard to get to where they are.
Hi,
There is a lot to be said on this topic and Tony's comments are right in most cases.
I have been doing a fair amount of cue repair for the last 8 years and here is the exception to the rule that I have seen:
There is a well known custom cue making company that sell their cues for and lot of money and has the backlog waiting list. Over the years I have seen a large percent of these cues in my shop that have warped butts. It is to the point that every time someone comes in with one of these I almost expect to see some kind of bump or warp.
I pointed out this to a few of the owners and they reacted in a disappointed way. I never told them it was junk or anything. When you pay over $ 2,000.00 for a cue and someone tells you it is warped, that does not make your day.
I don't mind putting on a wrap or refinishing a warped cue for someone, but when the butt does not roll right on a table I am not going to make a shaft for that cue.
My observation is that there are big name people getting big dollars for products with a low quality process control systems. What is funny is that even when the owner finds out many times they still think the cue is great. This is an example of the power of branding and name recognition.
When you can produce the great product that stands up over time and you get big bucks for the cue, that is the ideal.
Like the Sho Lin priest said to grasshopper in Kung Fu: "When you can walk on the rice paper and not leave a trace, then you shall have learned"
Cue making is a lot like that as there a so many nuances and details to master. Warped butts is a very bad thing.
Rick G