I've experimented with a lot of different cues for breaking and I've come to the conclusion that a break cue doesn't need to be that heavy at all, something like 17oz is fine for me. Lighter and I have problems controlling my break, heavier and I can't get the cue moving fast enough. As I posted elsewhere, I got my hands on a Dragon cue recently, and it's a 3/4 cue with 2 shafts, an 8mm tip ash shaft for playing and a 9.5mm tip maple shaft for breaking. With the ash shaft, the cue is 16.1oz, with the maple it's 17oz. Both shafts are tipped with Buffalo Diamond Plus tips and they grip the white just right. The shafts are right whippy, which is something I'd heard about Dragon cues, and I'd never use them for snooker, but for pool they play like a dream. I tried the cue just to see how it played and I loved it! Strange how it works, because if you'd told me about the cue, I'd have said that I don't want a whippy cue; it just goes to show that you should never say never!
So, to go back to the thread, I'd try and find a break cue with similar playing characteristics to your playing cue, and perhaps just a tad heavier and put on the tip you like and Bob's your uncle!
So, to go back to the thread, I'd try and find a break cue with similar playing characteristics to your playing cue, and perhaps just a tad heavier and put on the tip you like and Bob's your uncle!
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