Originally Posted by Cue crafty
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best cue tips to use?
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Originally Posted by bobmikeking View Post
Could very well be the case, it seems that the only player that might actually be getting some sort of paycheck from Century is Selby. He is listed as an official brand ambassador. It seems a bit crazy to me how happy some of the players are to promote brands in exchange for some free low cost products.
Good call by Century if so as form is temporary but class is permanent and it could just pay dividends now he is looking sharp again.⚪ 🔴🟡🟢🟤🔵💗⚫🕳️😎
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Originally Posted by bobmikeking View PostRonnie recently said that he uses Elk because it is the only tip that you can play every shot with. With other tips he says you have to compromise on the way you play some shots because of the tip.
What do you guys think about this?
He also said that when he has a duff tip on he just runs it anyway
Ps. * Ronnie is talking about pros here, and not club players of course.
Anyone know what tip Mark Allen uses? Makes a "crisp, klinky" decent sound, considering he rarely hits the ball hard?
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So it seems many are returning to Elks, Jimmy just said he's tried many on the market but has gone back to Elks. I wonder if they use the Elk pro's or bog standard Elks?!? In my experience anything in snooker with "pro" written on it is ****e, bit like the Triangle pro chalk for eg.
I do do really like the dependable quality and consistency of Century tips at the moment, and I can't be doing with any more trial and error with Elks or others as I just don't have time to burn on that one.⚪ 🔴🟡🟢🟤🔵💗⚫🕳️😎
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From the few players that I have seen that were asked if they were using the pro elks all said no, just the standard ones.
I always figured that the only difference between the standard elks and the pro version is that they have been hardness tested?
Kyren Wilson back using the triangle chalk for a while now, is he the first top player that used taom for a long period to switch back?
Wonder if he has gone back to elk tips as wellLast edited by bobmikeking; 14 November 2019, 07:10 PM.
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Originally Posted by bobmikeking View PostFrom the few players that I have seen that were asked if they were using the pro elks all said no, just the standard ones.
I always figured that the only difference between the standard elks and the pro version is that they have been hardness tested?
Kyren Wilson back using the triangle chalk for a while now, is he the first top player that used taom for a long period to switch back?
Wonder if he has gone back to elk tips as well
I guess to an extent we have all been hoodwinked by manufacturers marketing, when at the end of the day cheap Elks and Basic cheap Triangle chalk is still the choice of some of the best in the game... Who are we to disagree?⚪ 🔴🟡🟢🟤🔵💗⚫🕳️😎
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Originally Posted by bobmikeking View Post
Could very well be the case, it seems that the only player that might actually be getting some sort of paycheck from Century is Selby. He is listed as an official brand ambassador. It seems a bit crazy to me how happy some of the players are to promote brands in exchange for some free low cost products.
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I don't play enough to keep experimenting with different tips, just want to enjoy playing.
I've tried a few but ended up back with Elk.
I do however check the hardness.
My reference was an Elk that measured 75 on a hardness tester that I have in the workshop. As I say I tried various and of those found that I was as happy with a Century G3 which also measured 75 - it played similarly, held chalk similarly etc. But given the price I'd rather stick with old faithful Elks and just check the hardness.
The bottom line though is that different players will prefer different tips (and chalk and cues) over others and just becuase one person likes it doesn't make it best.
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Originally Posted by trying View PostI don't play enough to keep experimenting with different tips, just want to enjoy playing.
I've tried a few but ended up back with Elk.
I do however check the hardness.
My reference was an Elk that measured 75 on a hardness tester that I have in the workshop. As I say I tried various and of those found that I was as happy with a Century G3 which also measured 75 - it played similarly, held chalk similarly etc. But given the price I'd rather stick with old faithful Elks and just check the hardness.
The bottom line though is that different players will prefer different tips (and chalk and cues) over others and just becuase one person likes it doesn't make it best.
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