I am having the hardest time understanding the physics behind the arguments and explanations on straight cues. In this post I will only talk about the straightness of the cues, and will not get on the topic of the quality and feel of the cue during play, you can be the judge of that, but I personally would love to play with a cue straight as possible at my level to correct some flaws of my stroke, and so to figure out whether they are caused by the cue or my technique.
A perfectly straight tapered cue all the way to the butt, which still counts for a big portion of the cues made today, should for no reason give a wobbled/imperfect roll. One thing i heard being mentioned a lot is that nowadays a lot of the cues were not meant to be straight tapered, that is a fine.
But what does not make sense to me, it's how people say the cutoff at the butt affects the roll and thus making the roll wobble. This does not make sense to me as the center of gravity for a normal straight tapered cue is around 1/4 of the cue length from the butt, and the cutoff occurs only for a few inches at the butt, it is well behind the center of gravity, which means during the roll, unless weight is effectively and strangely tilted to the end of the butt at the cutoff, the roll will not be affected by the cutoff. During the roll, all contacts between the cue and the table will be the circular parts of the cue, the cutoff simply never meets the table or affect the roll in any way due to the fact that the center of gravity is far in-between the butt and the shaft.
It is understandable that handcrafted cues may not always able to achieve a perfect straight taper, but the thing is, they were meant-to-be straight tapered cues and a better roll is an indication of straighter cue. It seems to me that cuemakers are just using the cutoff as an excuse for warped cues.
If a straight tapered cue should look down to be straight, why should it not give a perfect roll if it also had a perfect joint? It just doesn't make sense.
And to conclude, just as how they say a straight cue could give wobbled roll and vice versa, I'd say there's a greater chance for one to look down on cue only warped a little bit and still tell me it is a straight cue, while this tiny bit warpage can easily be identified by rolling. I tested this because I've picked out a very warped cue (the shaft alone gives wobbled roll and with butt jointed its roll becomes more wobbled, it is VERY warped) and told many to look down and tell me how straight it is, majority of them couldn't tell, and even more misjudge the severity of the warp, and I personally just can't see crap with my eyes.
So there it goes my rant, I'm only trying to clarify some science here. thanks for reading.
A perfectly straight tapered cue all the way to the butt, which still counts for a big portion of the cues made today, should for no reason give a wobbled/imperfect roll. One thing i heard being mentioned a lot is that nowadays a lot of the cues were not meant to be straight tapered, that is a fine.
But what does not make sense to me, it's how people say the cutoff at the butt affects the roll and thus making the roll wobble. This does not make sense to me as the center of gravity for a normal straight tapered cue is around 1/4 of the cue length from the butt, and the cutoff occurs only for a few inches at the butt, it is well behind the center of gravity, which means during the roll, unless weight is effectively and strangely tilted to the end of the butt at the cutoff, the roll will not be affected by the cutoff. During the roll, all contacts between the cue and the table will be the circular parts of the cue, the cutoff simply never meets the table or affect the roll in any way due to the fact that the center of gravity is far in-between the butt and the shaft.
It is understandable that handcrafted cues may not always able to achieve a perfect straight taper, but the thing is, they were meant-to-be straight tapered cues and a better roll is an indication of straighter cue. It seems to me that cuemakers are just using the cutoff as an excuse for warped cues.
If a straight tapered cue should look down to be straight, why should it not give a perfect roll if it also had a perfect joint? It just doesn't make sense.
And to conclude, just as how they say a straight cue could give wobbled roll and vice versa, I'd say there's a greater chance for one to look down on cue only warped a little bit and still tell me it is a straight cue, while this tiny bit warpage can easily be identified by rolling. I tested this because I've picked out a very warped cue (the shaft alone gives wobbled roll and with butt jointed its roll becomes more wobbled, it is VERY warped) and told many to look down and tell me how straight it is, majority of them couldn't tell, and even more misjudge the severity of the warp, and I personally just can't see crap with my eyes.
So there it goes my rant, I'm only trying to clarify some science here. thanks for reading.
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