Cue sticks buying tips that will help you select the best cue stick to improve your play
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Cue Sticks Buying Tips

How to find the Best Pool Cue

Cue sticks are made of different materials and come in variety of styles and prices. There are one piece and two piece cues, cues that can be used for breaking or jumping and much more. Here you can find some useful cue sticks buying tips that will help you find the best cue stick to you're your purpose, your budget and your personal style.

The most popular cue sticks are still the classic wooden cues, which have been used in billiard games since the 17th century. Pool cues made of graphite and fiberglass are also commonly used by billiard players. Before buying a cue stick, you can learn here about the cue stick including how its different features affect your play.

The cue stick, usually simply called the cue, is the most essential equipment in every billiard, snooker and pool game. The long wooden stick is what causes the cue ball to send the object balls into the pockets. Professional billiard players see the cue stick as an organic extension of their right hand.

It wasn't until the 17th century when the cue stick was used in billiard games. The first billiard games in history were played using a wooden club called mace. It took about 300 years of billiards playing before people came to the conclusion that the tip of the mace is more useful when balls happen to arrive to the edges of the table. When the cue stick was first used in billiard games, only men were allowed to use it, fearing that the women players would poke the table with it.

Cue Sticks Buying Tips

When buying a cue stick, you should pay attention not only to its price and design but mainly to the cue's bumper, shaft, joint, ferrule and, of course, the cue tip. In addition, the cue weight has a significant part in the way you play the game. Here is a short introduction to each and every one of the cue stick features:

The Bumper is the rubbery part at the end of the cue butt. It's job is to protect the cue butt from being worn down while it rests on the floor. Quality cue stick will include a small screw to keep it from popping up.

The Joint The Joint attaches the shaft and the butt and can improve the feel of the cue. There are wooden, metal and plastic joints; each type has its supporters and opposes. Basically, choosing the best type of joint is an individual decision depends on the player's budget, style and feel.

The Ferrule is the parts which helps prevent the shaft from cracking during the game. Generally, the thicker the walls of the ferrules, the better they are.

The Tip is the part of the cue stick which contacts the cue ball. You can find tips in variety of materials and in different levels of hardness. The advantage of softer tips is that they enables you to apply English at ease, on the other hand their duration is short comparing to harder tips. Tips made of soft layers of leather have long duration.

If you want to learn how to maintain your new cue stick, click here.



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