Which woods are light in weight and still produce a good hit for a one-piece butt?
Thanks
Thanks
Not so light weight sir.JoeyInCali said:Padauk, bubingga, maple, zebrawood...
JoeyInCali said:I made a one piece bubinga break cue. With SS pin, it weighed 17.8 oz.
Great breaker .
qbilder said:Shedua is lightweight, and not mentioned.
bluepepper said:This happens to be the least expensive cue offered by Schmelke for a one piece butt. Does it hit well?
It isn't pretty, but for $75 plus the custom options I'd make due. That friggin' cocobola had me at hello. It's a hard one to get over.
qbilder said:Shedua is a hard & strong wood, and is usually high quality. I use it frequently in three peice butts. I prefer the figured stuff & that's all I buy. But it does make for a nice one peice cue. I built one a few months ago & it was a fine player. Naturally it weighed out to around 13.5oz but wasn't tough to add weight by giving it a heavier shaft & doing some weighting inside the butt. It came out to 19oz. pretty easily.
As for the other woods, it'll depend on each peice and the joint used. Schmelke offers several joints, my favorite being the 3/8-10. The purple should weigh in naturally at around 17-18oz. The cocobolo is tricky because is varies so much in weight, but could be anything from 19oz to 22oz. Bocote will almost always come in close to 19oz with a steel 3/8-10 pin.
Jerry is right. Schmelke makes a whopper of a cue for the money.
bluepepper said:Thanks so much. I assume the 13.5 oz. for the Shedua you mean for the butt alone? You give the others in total weights. Just making sure. And any guess on Maple?
qbilder said:That's correct, butt alone.
Maple cues I have built as one peice butts are initially around the same as shedua.
qbilder said:Purple is a little heavier than maple or shedua, not much but enough.
n10spool said:I used build compound bows in archery i used shedua and few other woods nice stuff.
wouldn't RAMIN WOOD be the lightest or chinese oak wood?
Craig