Because I once broke my beloved $1400 Schon cue due to it's flying out of a case that was knocked off a table the first thing that is important to me is that the cue remain in the case until I put my hand in it to take it out.
I personally feel better with that insurance that my cues are not going to immediately exit the case should it for any reason, my fault or otherwise, be tipped over when open.
Certainly most people take care with their equipment. But life is full accidents and if I owned something as precious as a Gina cue given to me by my wife then I would be sick and heart broken if somehow it were to fall out of a case and be seriously damaged. That's just me though. Other people probably don't put as much emotional stock in protecting their treasures and for them it wouldn't be a big deal to simply send it to Ernie for repair.
Accidents happen even to careful people. I have a bunch of stories collected from the years I owned Instroke through now. I need to get them all together for people to read. Meanwhile here is a collection from an earlier thread on this topic:
https://docs.google.com/View?id=dfs8sf4x_39zhs28dz4 Sorry I didn't take the time to make all the urls into live links yet.
When I was young I used a soft case. The Silver McDermott soft case was awesome. I was an early modifier as I hand sewed a strap onto it. Then a girlfriend bought me a grey porper and I thought I was the SHIT. The cue fit snugly inside and it seemed indestructible. I got teased about my "golf" bag in the Miscue Lounge by the oldtimers since I was I think the first one with a Porper case in that place.
My next case was a J.EF Q Case (Flowers) and that's the one which my cue fell out of and as such the one that launched me into case making as I first rebuilt the interior of that case to hold my cues. And that has been my platform ever since.
I do have one more story though which is a bit distressful. I had taken in some Vincintore cases on trade just to make a deal with a retailer to replace his stock with Instrokes.
So I had these Vincintore cases which were Whitten knockoffs in my shop collecting dust and not really knowing what to do with them. One night I wanted to take my one-of-a-kind Joss to Beezer's Billiards to let Mark Smith refinish it for me. I was in a hurry and I put the Joss butt in a Vincintore 1x2 and to my horror the bottom came off and my cue slid through a ring of nails as it exited the case through the bottom to the floor. The cue was scratched from the buttplate over the wrap and up into the forearm. You can email Mark at Mark Smith Cues to verify this.
The case had been made with a fiber board bottom and the nails had split the fiberboard so it was an accident waiting to happen. It was just perfect irony (or karma) that it happened to me because I was too lazy to walk across the shop and get an Instroke to transport my cues in.
Anyway, cue retention is paramount for me. Beyond that I prefer to have ease of use and storage methods that are comfortable.
Luckily for me we can build it.
