Regarding chevrons or arrows of a shaft. I have collected stats for a long time which I can't neglect the fact that I found, which goes against some experts or cue makers which I believe if it was true why they make the opposite?
The general saying is, the shaft that has few arrows mean the shaft grown fast in a tropical or moist area (as I believe, it can be both types stiff or flex) and for the shaft that has many and close arrows +10 to 15 the shaft grown slow in long winter forests and also can be both types stiff and flex. I have tested and found stiff and flex cues in both types whether many and few arrows.
The below stats the I have collected:
- Any top-quality cues or pro players cues I found, they don't have more than 8 or so arrows, and in some even less than 5, but when you ask a cue maker about the arrow numbers, he would reply, no, there is no difference between few or many arrows, it is just for aesthetic look but when he makes a quality one it would have few.
-As I know the majority of pro players tend to play with stiff cues or medium stiff and remember there are players like to play with flex ones. As I checked most of the cues have few arrows.
-Most of the cheap cues have 10 up to 15 or more close arrows.
My questions
1-Does not that mean the shaft that grow fast is much better than the one that grow slow? and that would absolutely make it way more expensive.
2-Has anyone found a very good quality cue from a reputable cue maker (an expensive cue) that has more than 15 arrows?
The general saying is, the shaft that has few arrows mean the shaft grown fast in a tropical or moist area (as I believe, it can be both types stiff or flex) and for the shaft that has many and close arrows +10 to 15 the shaft grown slow in long winter forests and also can be both types stiff and flex. I have tested and found stiff and flex cues in both types whether many and few arrows.
The below stats the I have collected:
- Any top-quality cues or pro players cues I found, they don't have more than 8 or so arrows, and in some even less than 5, but when you ask a cue maker about the arrow numbers, he would reply, no, there is no difference between few or many arrows, it is just for aesthetic look but when he makes a quality one it would have few.
-As I know the majority of pro players tend to play with stiff cues or medium stiff and remember there are players like to play with flex ones. As I checked most of the cues have few arrows.
-Most of the cheap cues have 10 up to 15 or more close arrows.
My questions
1-Does not that mean the shaft that grow fast is much better than the one that grow slow? and that would absolutely make it way more expensive.
2-Has anyone found a very good quality cue from a reputable cue maker (an expensive cue) that has more than 15 arrows?
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