Hi everyone and thank you in advance for your response.
Can someone please explain what makes a cue hit so well compared to other cues? How do you know as a cuemaker how a cue will turn out before you make it? Can you combine any type of different wood and still produce the same consistent hit as compared to using other woods?
Do you know how a cue will hit using different woods compared to others?
I know the shaft, tip and ferrule have a lot to do with it, but it fascinates me how you can know as a cue maker what type of shaft to put on what type of cue with what length of ferrule and ferrule material.
I understand that price is dependent on quality of wood, intricacy of inlays and designs etc. I am starting to shop around for a new cue and it seems overwhelming at the choices I have. The problem is I am not experienced enough to know what a "monster playing cue" is or how to recognize it. I hear a lot a great stuff about Tim Scruggs and Mike Web, and Cokers, and Stacey, Etc....thelist on AZ billairds seems to go on and on and although I know its about personal preference, my inexperience leaves be befuddled at who to contact for a cue....
I live in Northeast Pa and I am a little to anxious to wait until Allen Hopkins expo in March of 2011 to hit some high end cues to see what I like, yet I am afraid of spending a grand on something that I may not like in terms of playability and buying it on blind faith from a custom cue maker. Not that I doubt any of the talent here ( and thank you all for being so gracious to answer all of our questions), I am jsut afraid of spending a lot of money and not liking the cue. I recently bought a custom Whisler on ebay and although the cue looks amazing, I really do not like the way it plays.
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Pardon my ignorance please. I just started playing pool again consistently and I absolutely love it. Everyone says why buy production cues when customs are so much better, but I don't know what to look for.
Can someone please explain what makes a cue hit so well compared to other cues? How do you know as a cuemaker how a cue will turn out before you make it? Can you combine any type of different wood and still produce the same consistent hit as compared to using other woods?
Do you know how a cue will hit using different woods compared to others?
I know the shaft, tip and ferrule have a lot to do with it, but it fascinates me how you can know as a cue maker what type of shaft to put on what type of cue with what length of ferrule and ferrule material.
I understand that price is dependent on quality of wood, intricacy of inlays and designs etc. I am starting to shop around for a new cue and it seems overwhelming at the choices I have. The problem is I am not experienced enough to know what a "monster playing cue" is or how to recognize it. I hear a lot a great stuff about Tim Scruggs and Mike Web, and Cokers, and Stacey, Etc....thelist on AZ billairds seems to go on and on and although I know its about personal preference, my inexperience leaves be befuddled at who to contact for a cue....
I live in Northeast Pa and I am a little to anxious to wait until Allen Hopkins expo in March of 2011 to hit some high end cues to see what I like, yet I am afraid of spending a grand on something that I may not like in terms of playability and buying it on blind faith from a custom cue maker. Not that I doubt any of the talent here ( and thank you all for being so gracious to answer all of our questions), I am jsut afraid of spending a lot of money and not liking the cue. I recently bought a custom Whisler on ebay and although the cue looks amazing, I really do not like the way it plays.
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Pardon my ignorance please. I just started playing pool again consistently and I absolutely love it. Everyone says why buy production cues when customs are so much better, but I don't know what to look for.