I have been adding lead weight to the joint end of my playing shafts for more than 20 years.
It works.
I'd guess that adding weight to the total must work differently from just shifting some of the existing weight forward...?If the center of mass of the rotating object is moved closer to the rotation point, the system moment of inertia is decreased, causing more instability
I'd guess that adding weight to the total must work differently from just shifting some of the existing weight forward...?
pj
chgo
I think the main advantage is that it keeps the cue down on an open bridge and when elevated..... The forward weight may have effects that are beneficial to the stroke, but it isn't what was claimed.
I think the main advantage is that it keeps the cue down on an open bridge and when elevated.
Pat Fleming invented and sold (still sells?) a weight that slips onto the shaft for situations where you want the weight forward.
I test hit one at the super billiards expo. Nice guys, decent quality cues but the balance of the cue felt very very uncomfortable to me, and I like a forward weighted cue. Not for me.
It seems like this would be the most important thing for them to mention but I didn't notice it in the part of the video I could stand to watch. (I don't like sales pitches. They're too disconnected from reality.)Did you find out where the center of balance was?
Hu
I know Joey would know this better, but I'm pretty sure.that cue was also forward balancedI seem to remember Efren talking about his $10 cue he loved because the shaft was so dense & heavy.