I was playing yesterday with a friend and lent him a spare cue which I just use to practise re-tipping. The shaft on that cue is really thin compared to mine, I played a few shots with it and found it so much easier to aim, especially on difficult thin shots. I've been playing well with my normal cue, in fact I had my first century with it last month, but playing with my spare cue seemed to take a lot of the guesswork out of aiming, so now I'm in a quandary about which cue to use! Does anyone think a thinner shaft is better for aiming or is it just my imagination?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Is a thin shaft better for aiming?
Collapse
X
-
Originally Posted by Looter View PostI was playing yesterday with a friend and lent him a spare cue which I just use to practise re-tipping. The shaft on that cue is really thin compared to mine, I played a few shots with it and found it so much easier to aim, especially on difficult thin shots. I've been playing well with my normal cue, in fact I had my first century with it last month, but playing with my spare cue seemed to take a lot of the guesswork out of aiming, so now I'm in a quandary about which cue to use! Does anyone think a thinner shaft is better for aiming or is it just my imagination?This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8
Comment
-
Originally Posted by Looter View PostI was playing yesterday with a friend and lent him a spare cue which I just use to practise re-tipping. The shaft on that cue is really thin compared to mine, I played a few shots with it and found it so much easier to aim, especially on difficult thin shots. I've been playing well with my normal cue, in fact I had my first century with it last month, but playing with my spare cue seemed to take a lot of the guesswork out of aiming, so now I'm in a quandary about which cue to use! Does anyone think a thinner shaft is better for aiming or is it just my imagination?
My brother plays with an ADR cue. The cue has a thin shaft. ( especially at the end of the shaft, the last 12" )
Amount of response in that cue is just unreal.
And he can get on with it very well.
I've tried it , and honestly, that cue would'nt suit my game.
At the end , it's a Matter of personal preference. imo.
Comment
-
Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostIt all depends because usually the thickness of the shaft sets the flex in the shaft. A very thin shaft would be a very whippy cue
Comment
-
This is really personal preference, among all the cues I have bought & used, MW's cue has the thinnest shaft, I have 2 MW cues, Black Legend & a Macassar Legend, both cues have the same thickness of shaft but is really thinner if compare to others.
But not really whippy if the shaft is stiff enough, the Macassar Legend has a stiff shaft thus not whippy & the Black Legend is slightly whippy cause medium stiff shaft.
Earlier my playing cue was a Jason Owen, slightly thicker shaft but after get to use on the thinner shaft MW cues.... I can't play at all with the JO now, end up JO sold.
I've ordered a Stamford S1 cue & a JPU, not sure how's the thickness of their shafts.Last edited by kadobau; 10 August 2017, 01:19 AM.
Comment
-
Originally Posted by Looter View PostTerry a few months ago someone on here said they had a thin strip of masking tape or similar at the top of the shaft to aid aiming and I'm sure you commented, don't suppose you know what section or thread it's in?Terry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
Comment
-
Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostOne more thing, when you say you think you aim better with a thin shaft is it really because you're making more pots and not actually aiming better? It might be that your technique is better suited to a shaft which has more flex in it.
Comment
Comment