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cue tapers

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  • #16
    Dominic always looks for cues which are larger than he ultimately ends up using them at.

    He is a serial tinkerer and loves to do some work to cues himself (and does it well too) and so, often will reduce diameters to his final preferences.

    The average cue would have a diameter of approx 14 to 15mm at the 12" (or 300mm) point from the ferrule. At or below 14 feels slimmer and above 14.75mm feels thick...ish.

    There is nothing much to be learnt from thickness of a cue at one section alone though, because there are other factors which have a bearing on whether the cue will feel stiffer or springier. As much as anything, it's a guide as to whether a cue will feel comfortable over the bridge hand, but less so in regard of how all cues will perform. Each cue would need to be considered on its own merits, which need to take into account other details of their specs, as well as the rigidity of the timber in the shafts.

    It's far from any kind of precise science.

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    • #17
      This may be a couple of my daft questions but here goes.
      At what stage can you tell a shaft will be too springy or too stiff ?
      If it's before its finished can you make the taper slightly thicker to stiffen up a springy one and a bit slimmer on a shaft that may be too stiff?
      This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
      https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8

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      • #18
        if its stiff its stiff. when you remove wood you take away weight, when that happens everything can change, depending on how much you take off. cutting out the lumps and bumps will sure make it play better
        its all about the wood

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        • #19
          straight taper is best imo

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          • #20
            Originally Posted by Les1951 View Post
            straight taper is best imo
            What is a straight taper?

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            • #21
              Originally Posted by Bigmeek View Post
              What is a straight taper?
              exactly! no such thing, you could straight taper from 9mm to 30mm and from 9mm to 100mm and it would still be a straight taper so it means nothing

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              • #22
                A taper is the reduction in dia/width over length, so if there's no reduction, there's no taper ( no such thing as a straight taper, imho ). .
                Last edited by billabong; 11 January 2015, 09:23 AM.

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                • #23
                  Ah, thanks guys. Maybe poster means that the reduction is "even" from tip to butt.

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                  • #24
                    Or does he mean like a billiard cue ?? ie last portion near tip is the same diameter throughout ??

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                    • #25
                      Originally Posted by jrc750 View Post
                      Or does he mean like a billiard cue ?? ie last portion near tip is the same diameter throughout ??
                      Like the J.P.Mannock patent . .

                      http://www.thecuecollector.com/JPMannocksPatent.html

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