PROG8R said:Schon Wisconsin
Mcdermott Wisconsin
Pechauer Wisconsin
Jacoby Wisconsin
Jackson Wisconsin
Dale Perry Florida
You mean Dale Perry 1/1s?

PROG8R said:Schon Wisconsin
Mcdermott Wisconsin
Pechauer Wisconsin
Jacoby Wisconsin
Jackson Wisconsin
Dale Perry Florida
Purdman said:Dan started Joss Cues with a partner in 1968.
In 1972 Dan took full control of the business and continues to make the original Joss Cue in Towson, Maryland.
All Joss cues are made in Towson, MD., USA! Dan has had the same shop for many years. He is one of only 10 cue makers in the ACA Hall of Fame.
This rumor may have been started by McDermott because they import thousands of cues from CHINA. The McBlud and the Sledgehammer are two that I know about.
If you want a USA made cue, buy JOSS!
Purdman
Authorized Joss Distributor
hondo said:Thanks, Donald. I have 2 Joss cues and they are my favorite production cue.
JB Cases said:So I don't know what to tell you other than you got a Fury cue that has been terribly abused somehow. As I told you before we sell thousands of them every year and if they were bad then this board would be flooded with stories of poor quality Fury cues.
JB Cases said:So I don't really see where you can begrudge the people who make it their business to supply the things you want for making money on it. If you don't like their prices then shop around - that is your duty as a consumer.
JB Cases said:As for being personal, not really. I just thought it quite interesting that you would use the namesake of a person who dealt in science and facts while at the time making a highly speculative and accusatory post.
JB Cases said:I have to ask however why you chose to use me and the fact that I make cases in China in your example if you weren't trying to be personal?
Xin Nian Kuai Le. Happy New Year.
JB Cases said:I an sure that Norway is bitterly cold so I can't comment on how the climate may have affected the cues. I can tell you that I have been all over the Untied States in extremes of heat and cold with a carload of Fury cues and have displayed them at tournaments with no problems whatsoever.
rossaroni said:As best as I know, McDermotts are still made in Wisconsin, along with Schons, Vikings, Pechaeurs, Schmelke, and a few more. I don't know if they are entirely made in the U.S. but they make it seem like they are.
Newton said:It should be mentioned in this context that the cue is by far new, it's most likely one of you're early days cue. The only plan I have for it is to use it as a practice cue to practice new Linen grips, tearing it off, and then try leather wrap tearing it off. Except from this I may try put on some different types of finnish and possible let it rest.
I take it that it's just the cue I have and I guess the quality is so high theses day's that we would see pro players use them. I have a impression that over here it's a entry cue which people use for a while and change to something else.
I'll do shop around and I do ever so often compare prices. So when a "US - made" cue is sold for the same price as a Chinese cue, I guess they have the same income....? Or is there someone which earns more than the other? And if I understand you correct, US cue makers could actually just shut down their shops, because the quality from you're country is now the same or even better?
I think you should forget great Newton in this story and keep you're head out of the speculations and deal with the facts. What kind of interesting thoughts do you get reading posts from "ShortMan", "Iamrich" or "Skunkboy" ? Leave it.
Well, if you read my post I was saying " If I was producing cue cases ---..." The fact that you feel that this is something which fit's you position like a glove, do not mean that I'm attacking YOU.
Read that again.. I would do the same if I was producing a product BUT I would find it hard to price the product in the same way as a product produced in a high cost country, simply because my customers would understand that the cost of production is not the reason for the price, specially if I'm labeling it with "Made in China"........... That's the whole point in this story. Could it be the reason for the "Made in China" stickers not proudly placed on the cue?
It did pass my ears that you had some "bitter could" experiences back in you're country as well, where there was a lot of snow
Have a nice celebration and hopefully the snow would leave you're area to let the celebration go on.
I'll herby pull from further arguments in this thread and let you others continue. If someone would like to se that Fury, PM and I'll drop some pictures.
Heading for some constructive scientific thinking and I guess I have to watch out for that Apple which should drop in my head![]()
Have a nice "Rats" year (It's the year of the Rat now ?).
N
JB Cases said:I would like those pictures. I will blow them up and put them in every corner of the factory to remind my people WHY we should be concious of quality all the time.
JB Cases said:You have got to be kidding. Do you think that tariffs are enacted to "protect" jobs?
Where in the Constitution does it say that government should regulate trade?
You are saying that imported goods have destroyed the American way of life? How so?
What is the "American" way of life?
The right to life?
The right to liberty?
The right to the pursuit of happiness?
How do you feel about it when the US Government subsidizes the production of wheat and thereby causes a glut of wheat depressing prices and causing farmers in other parts of the world to go under because they can't afford to produce wheat at the cost of US subsidized wheat?
It is not my business to promote the importation of goods. My business is to provide goods that give the consumer a good value for the money they are giving to me.
If I don't do that then I expect to go out of business.
You are sensationalizing things way out of proportion.
First of all NO ONE has the right to conduct business and be free of competiton. When that situation happens then it leads most often to higher prices and less value for the consumer.
Secondly, millions of businesses start each year and the majority of them fail through poor management rather than competition.
Thirdly, no business has an inherent right to exist. A business only exists as long as it is able to serve it's customers. So if a business goes under because the competition is too strong or if it merges with the competition then that is the natural cycle of business.
Where do you propose it stops Jaden with things like tariffs and subsidies? Which companies should get government welfare? Which industries should get government protection? What are the criteria? On whose behalf should these things be implemented?
Not to say that you are this way but it's often that those opposed to personal welfare are for corporate welfare. I think that you would be amazed at the amount of government "help" in the form of grants, loans, subsidies, tariffs, contracts, consulting and so on that goes on in the USA every year.
And as for your "slave labor" comment - another red herring by the way. Think about who picked your vegetables next time you are buying tomatoes on sale. I wonder how many of those migrant workers living in shacks are enjoying your lifestyle when they finish a 12 hour day for less than minimum wage with no health care, no worker's comp, no social security.
You think China is out to destroy the "American Way of Life"? If they did that then who would buy all these goods? Are you kidding? China wants the American Way of Life - a tv in each room, a two car garage and three cars to fill it, $4 coffee (they have that now).
What makes you think that other countries need to have labor rates that are the same as US rates? Even in the USA labor rates vary wildly.
Olhausen Billiards just moved from California to Tennessee. Why? Because Tennessee offered them tax breaks and free training for their employees and so they could reduce their costs. So why isn't it bad for the California employees who lost their Olhausen jobs and didn't want to or couldn't move.
And the list goes on and on and on and on..........
It's just business.
Newton said:Since this seems to be a case between you and me, do you want me to post the pictures here or should I email them? I can shoot some high res tomorrow and send on email if this is preferred or post some lower res here. You can PM the answer if you prefer.
N
Send me one of those sweet Tai-Can cues,i will treat it like gold and play with it non stop and write it up too,haha,but on a serious note i think the cues i have seen from them online are awesome.JB Cases said:I don't mind getting them in private. I don't mind having them posted here. If you ended up with a crappy cue then it's a fact. How it got to that stage however is something that neither of us can know.
I have been around the cue game a long time. I have seen crappy cues made by Americans, Germans, Taiwanese, Chinese, and Filipinos, among others. I have also owned many great ones that held up under all kinds of seemingly adverse conditions, from hot and humid to freezing and dry.
I once took a long road trip from South Florida to Ontario and had more than $50,000 worth of cues with me. During that three weeks the cues went from 80 degrees to below freezing and back again. None of them were harmed and they were a mixture of about $40,000 in high end cues and $10,000 in low end to mid range cues. I think that there are plenty of people left in the USA who remember all the road trips we took in the mid 90's selling cases and cues. Mostly selling cases and trading for cues.
It takes some doing in my mind to get a cue to such a destructed state as you describe.
The only point is that the cue you have is an isolated example and is not enough to generalize a whole category of cues. Still though, my goal is to never ever sell a cue that ends up in that state. I can only think that the reason it wasn't taken care of is that it wasn't valued. These days I guess most people don't really value a hundred dollars worth of cue. Who knows?
I will be happy to send you a replacement if you will agree to use it as you would any other cue and tell us in three months what the quality level is like.
my email is john@sterling-gaming.com if you would like to send the pictures to me privately please include your address.
Thank you,
john
Jaden said:IMO they went about it ass backwards. They didn't protect the American companies and workers by introducing import tariffs and in the fear of lowering export prices on high volume exports, they created the subsidizing programs for farms. I disagree with both things. I'm not a hypocrite I don't believe that they should do both in order to make America richer and the world poorer, I'm not about that. I am about not destroying Americas future by making us so dependent on foreign nations for oil, tech components etc. that we are at the mercy of foreign nations that then force us to prevent or start wars etc to preserve various perceptions of the American way of life. The American way of life I was referring to was what we had before the corporations became globalized. We may be richer as a nation because of it, but not as individuals as the disparity of wealth has transfered from middle class americans and small business owners to mutlinational corporations.
Fast Lenny said:Send me one of those sweet Tai-Can cues,i will treat it like gold and play with it non stop and write it up too,haha,but on a serious note i think the cues i have seen from them online are awesome.![]()
JB Cases said:A Gold Crown V costs about $8000 retail in the USA. Who do you think is responsible for the double cost in the Europe? Do you think that perhaps Brunswick is charging twice as much because the tables are going to Europe?
No, it's the importers, your fellow countrymen who are charging so much because they know you can't buy a Brunswick table from a choice of vendors within a reasonable physical distance.
This reminds me of when I first went to Germany in the early 90's. When I got there I found that Meucci's and McDermotts, you know, those great cues from the 80's?, were selling for double their US retail prices.
I convinced my friend Andy Sattler to invest in Tim Scruggs cues and he became one of the best known sellers of custom cues in Germany. As a result of the high prices of production cues it opened the door for the introduction of both custom cues and for less expensive imports.
The fact that a Gold Crown costs $15,000 in your country has nothing to do with where the production is done and what it costs to produce the table. It has everything to do with supply and demand. And since the price appears to be inflated because the supply is limited it opens the door for other brands to come in.
I would say if you want a Gold Crown then buy one from the USA and pay to have it shipped to Norway. You will probably save $4000.
Or, conversely, you could start importing tables with the same level of quality with a much lower price point and provide those to your fellow Norwegians. Thus allowing them to enjoy pool and become lifelong players and consumers of pool equipment.
Back to Adam Smith - the "invisible hand" that guides the marketplace dictates that with competition the quality steadily goes up as the price goes down.
This is because consumers vote with their money and that vote goes to the vendors who provide the best balance of good quality and low price.
So vendors are forced to continue to improve in order to stay in business supplying the product chain.
I am tired of hearing how the "quality" of import cues sucks.
Prove it.
Somebody stop talking about it and just prove it conclusively.
You know what? I don't think that anyone can.
Here is why?
Cues made by Kao Kao and Taican in China do not suck.
In side by side comparisons over a large selection, the cues of today built in the above two factories have the same features and are built in the same way as cues made in the United States.
Of course each cuemaker has their particular methods that they find to be the best. And each player has their particular tastes which not every cue can satisfy.
But on a purely apples to apples comparison, the apples from the good Chinese cue companies are on average nearly as good as the apples from the USA. And this statement would bear out in ANY impartial Consumer Reports style comparison.
In truth, cues are very good these days and the average price of a good cue is very low.
As to what the price of a cue "should" be..... it should be whatever the market will bear. If Predator can make a $5 cue and charge $800 for it and the consumer is happy with their purchase then that's great for Predator. Who cares? What do you think happens with the $795 profit? It gets spent on other things and provides jobs and economic stimulation elsewhere.
IF the quality is there and the customer is happy then where is the problem? You make it sound like people are painting bamboo sticks and passing them off as Balabushkas. This is not the case at all.
I give up.
I get so tired of people coming on here and acting as if it's all so simple. They condemn people who produce in Asia and want to examine the costs to the last penny to assess how much "profit" the producers are making and then on the same hand will pay $1500 for a cue that didn't cost much more to produce in the USA. And this without asking the cuemaker to open their books in order to police the profit made.
My gross profit on the cases I have sold in the last six months is $4000.
Gross profit is the amount left over when the production cost of the goods is deducted from the revenue.
My net profit from the cases is zero because all the gross profit went to purchase more machines, more leather, more supplies which in turn fuel the economy. In fact I have invested much more than $4000 into this venture so at this point I am still in the negative. But I have a lot of leather, d-rings, and several sewing machines - and none of it will buy me a pint of milk.
Profit is what allows people to do more than just exist. Profit is what keeps you employed. Profit is what fuels innovation. Without the financial support that comes from profits then research and development cannot be funded.
Why do I bother?
I don't know. I guess it's far easier for people to rant about things that they have no experience in rather than to dig deeper to find out the complex issues that surround life on the globe.
You could probably care less that I can't buy good cheese in the town I live in China. You could probably care less that a lot of the little luxuries you enjoy and easy access to most things are not available to me here. What does this have to do with anything? It's simple. Profit fuels your lifestyle. Without profit you would be living in a hovel and milking your one scrawny goat.
On one hand you want to enjoy the lifestyle you have and one the other you complain about the prices of that lifestyle.
Rant over.
Thats interesting,from looking at the cues i have seen they look like high quality,i havent seen Kao Kao cues yet but if they are like the Tai Can cues i am impressed,nice quality for the money.I wouldnt be suprised if someone doesnt import them and sign them and mark them up 3-4 fold,some of the cues look like Carmelli.JB Cases said:Taican builds some nice cues. Kao Kao is their main competitor and I work for Sterling Gaming and consult to Kao Kao.
Most of Kao Kao's production goes to North America and Europe. I can't tell you all the brands that Kao Kao makes because of privacy issues. I can tell you that they sell hundreds of thousands of cues per year.
You won't see a lot of Kao Kao's cues on Asian Ebay. Taican sells cues to smaller distributers who don't have the same overhead as those who must support a wider network of dealers and spend more to market their brands.
Kao Kao sells to larger dealers who have their own brands and support the products through their own networks.
That is why you won't see a lot of penetration of brands like those you find on HK Ebay into the American market. No support structure. All sales final.
Lucasi and Adams cues are,im sure there are alot of others.WesleyW said:What kind of brandnames does Taican build?
Fast Lenny said:Thats interesting,from looking at the cues i have seen they look like high quality,i havent seen Kao Kao cues yet but if they are like the Tai Can cues i am impressed,nice quality for the money.I wouldnt be suprised if someone doesnt import them and sign them and mark them up 3-4 fold,some of the cues look like Carmelli.![]()