The other day I was playing at my local spot and some guys were playing at the next table over. One of them had a Players cue, but when I asked the other guy what he was shooting with, he said a custom. I asked who, and I can't remember the name, but I also asked to shoot with it if he didn't mind. He said play a couple games with it to see how I liked it. Well, I didn't. The cue was drastically too light for me, felt hollow and lifeless when I made contact with the ball, and wasn't exactly straight. The thing I didn't get though, is how a cuemaker would let a stick out of his shop looking the way it did, and why anyone would pay money for it? The inlays were just plain out sloppy, glue marks all over the place, and the shaft didn't seem to fit quite right when screwed on. But sure enough, the cuemaker's name was signed in between a point with the date.
When you guys were learning how to assemble cues, and possibly turned out an ugly stepchild, did you let them go for cheap or did you scrap'em after you were done?
When you guys were learning how to assemble cues, and possibly turned out an ugly stepchild, did you let them go for cheap or did you scrap'em after you were done?