Originally Posted by bigandyg
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Review MAC CUE Laminated Shaft ( maple )...
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Originally Posted by strobbekoen View PostWell, that's not my experience.
The density of various woods used in cue making differs little. Within a certain type of wood it's choosing those pieces with the right amount of flex/spring that makes a good shaft. stiff + dense = a dead shaft, assuming you would use a denser material for the main wood of the shaft. Laminated shafts are not denser, and the way they are made cuemakers can design the right amount of flex into them. The taper of a cue also has a big impact on how it feels and generates spin. I have quite a collection of cues and the cue that has the best feel and generates spin with the least effort is my old Wooldridge cue which has a slim taper and a medium stiff shaft.
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Originally Posted by Master Blaster View PostThe black lamination lines and the ebony butt are very smart looking.
I read yesterday that Meucci are making shafts with 39 laminations! They reckon it has more forward balance (as you've said about your cue). They say that 39 laminations leads to radial consistency equal to natural maple. I wondered if any snooker cue makers were using such materials in their cues?
Is there any risk of delamination of the shaft over time please? I clean my shaft with a damp rag, so I'm wondering about the glue between the laminations.“Thus so wretched is man that he would weary even without any cause for weariness... and so frivolous is he that, though full of a thousand reasons for weariness, the least thing, such as playing billiards or hitting a ball, is sufficient enough to amuse him.” Mr. Blaise Pascal
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I'm wondering why these cues are more expensive than hand selected ash or maple? Ok, so they have to cut the make into sheets bit that also means they will waste less, that's the whole point of plywood. So why does a Peradon Newbury cost £100 more than it would with an ash shaft? Someone told me that a custom can cost more than aParris Ultimate which is faster to already. Are cue makes creaming new technology of first adopters?
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How can it be labour intensity if cue makers are buying sheets or blanks ready made? Peradon are using machines! Ok, so rolling up isn't free, and any extra cost goes through the usual retail multiplier but I'm still wondering why a custom LM costs more than a HAND planed ultimate, which is already double what it should retail for. If it costs £400 to make an ash custom I'm thinking that a custom LM should be about £500 if Omin after selling LM shafts for £100?
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