I've been reading through some of the cue posts on here and also in the For Sale section and I'm surprised how many on this forum are buying and selling cues on a regular basis.
It would seem as if there are some cue making faves on this forum notably Trevor White, John Parris, Mike Wooldridge among others.
I appreciate that there is great skill to make a quality cue but I assume that even paying around £500 for a cue doesn't guarantee that it will play well for each individual. Is that the reason why there seems to be a lot of these expensive cues for sale?
I recently purchased a cue from Green Baize but was fortunate to be able to try a vast amount of cues they had in stock ranging from £50-£300 and was surprised how a cheap £50 cue felt nicer to play with than a £300 cue! Obviously one was machine spliced and the other hand made and one looked much nicer! I finally ended up with a King Cue Excellence which felt the nicest to play with from all the cues I tested (around 15) which fortunately looks very nicely made also.
I have seen a Mike Wooldrige and John Parris cue and to my untrained eye I don't see any difference in quality to the mid range cues (King Cue and Master Cue). I have examined the splices on my own cue and they are near enough perfect and the grain of the ash is a nice pattern and even just like on the other 2 cues mentioned.
I'm interested in what you look for in a cue and if you have owned plenty... are your priorities when looking for that perfect cue, one that feels right or looks right?
If it's the former and you have a cheap machine spliced cue that players perfect, would you change this for one that looks nicer but try to get one made that feels like your former cue? Hence the changing of cues.
I'd like to hear your thoughts
It would seem as if there are some cue making faves on this forum notably Trevor White, John Parris, Mike Wooldridge among others.
I appreciate that there is great skill to make a quality cue but I assume that even paying around £500 for a cue doesn't guarantee that it will play well for each individual. Is that the reason why there seems to be a lot of these expensive cues for sale?
I recently purchased a cue from Green Baize but was fortunate to be able to try a vast amount of cues they had in stock ranging from £50-£300 and was surprised how a cheap £50 cue felt nicer to play with than a £300 cue! Obviously one was machine spliced and the other hand made and one looked much nicer! I finally ended up with a King Cue Excellence which felt the nicest to play with from all the cues I tested (around 15) which fortunately looks very nicely made also.
I have seen a Mike Wooldrige and John Parris cue and to my untrained eye I don't see any difference in quality to the mid range cues (King Cue and Master Cue). I have examined the splices on my own cue and they are near enough perfect and the grain of the ash is a nice pattern and even just like on the other 2 cues mentioned.
I'm interested in what you look for in a cue and if you have owned plenty... are your priorities when looking for that perfect cue, one that feels right or looks right?
If it's the former and you have a cheap machine spliced cue that players perfect, would you change this for one that looks nicer but try to get one made that feels like your former cue? Hence the changing of cues.
I'd like to hear your thoughts
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