I did mess with CTE the other night and I've got a few issues.I'm not playing with anyone. I'm just seeing who has the spacial perception to figure out the difference geometrically.
This is a good exercise, trust me. I'm not being belligerent nor am I acting out of line, I'm merely asking the group a question.
You're getting warmer; but, that results in certain geometric changes from picture 1. Once we get to the bottom of this, I have a separate group of pictures to post. But, I'm trying not to get ahead of myself. I want to be careful to do this in steps without me lecturing.
I hope Mike Page and Bob Jewett also post their ideas on the differences in the pics. If PJ weren't banned, I'd hope he'd participate too.
Dave
Here is my understanding of CTE. On a half ball hit you are aiming through the center of the cue and at the edge of the ob. I've got that. When you have to shift because you aren't set up for a halfball hit you aren't really aiming at the edge of the ob anymore. In this system you reference the halfball hit instead of ghostballing it. You change the angle that the cueball is hit relative to halfball to make shots instead of judging where the cueball needs to hit the ob.
Assuming I've got that right, and please correct me if I'm wrong, here is the issue I've got.
One tip sinks all. The way I've seen it described CTE has only one adjustment to sink everything on the table. A tip of right or left then rotation is given as the only needed adjustment. This can't be right. A tip of right from 6 inches will give you a different contact point than a tip of right at 7 feet. Angular changes to effect non-half ball hits are going to vary with distance. There has got to be finer adjustment than just one tip rotate and shoot.
You've defined two circles but you haven't described how they are used. Is it related to this distance issue? If they are not I would love to hear how they are used.