Is there any reason to think that if you buy an older cue the wood will be better? Did they use better stocks of wood in previous decades? Was it better dried?
Are some of the woods used in older cues - maple, hornbeam, pear, service and so on - worth buying to play with rather than just collect?
Does an older cue benefit from decades of settling and maturing?
Interested in all these questions. And was there a particular decade or period of cue manufacture where the general run of cues - not just the handmade ones - had good quality wood?
Andy Evans
Are some of the woods used in older cues - maple, hornbeam, pear, service and so on - worth buying to play with rather than just collect?
Does an older cue benefit from decades of settling and maturing?
Interested in all these questions. And was there a particular decade or period of cue manufacture where the general run of cues - not just the handmade ones - had good quality wood?
Andy Evans
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