From what I'm told, Spencer, Reardon and Hendry played with bent cues.
There is lots of debate about what's required to make a good cue and the following seems to be a must:
It has to be straight (never any mentions of the various ways to make a cue with more than one taper on the cue).
It's stiffness (modern day cues must be stiff?)
The grain need to be straight
The grain needs to be tight
There must be 5 evenly spaces on the shaft for the cue to be considered a great shaft
It must be straight when rolled on a table, It must be straight with the eye, It must have tapering gradients suited to the type of hit required etc etc
The ebony must be black
I have my own opinions on what is really important and what is visual but I'm interested in other opinions as I'm never surprised at some of the requirements that are a must from guys searching for 'THE' cue.
I'll kick it off, if a cue is that important, how many World Champions played with a bent cue and if they knew it was bent, why not change it for a straight one if it's that important?
There is lots of debate about what's required to make a good cue and the following seems to be a must:
It has to be straight (never any mentions of the various ways to make a cue with more than one taper on the cue).
It's stiffness (modern day cues must be stiff?)
The grain need to be straight
The grain needs to be tight
There must be 5 evenly spaces on the shaft for the cue to be considered a great shaft
It must be straight when rolled on a table, It must be straight with the eye, It must have tapering gradients suited to the type of hit required etc etc
The ebony must be black
I have my own opinions on what is really important and what is visual but I'm interested in other opinions as I'm never surprised at some of the requirements that are a must from guys searching for 'THE' cue.
I'll kick it off, if a cue is that important, how many World Champions played with a bent cue and if they knew it was bent, why not change it for a straight one if it's that important?
Comment