Hey everyone; I'm curious to find, if anyone out there has a
REAL mathematical system for 2 cushion first shots as per the diagram below?
Cueball is YELLOW, long,short,ball,short,score!
View attachment 168159
Bill Smith "Mr3Cushion"
Bill,
You got me looking through some of my old stuff and found something from Jim McFarlin that may be something you're looking for, maybe not. I do not know how to use the WEI table so I will try to explain what was written on a diagram from long ago:
It's a dead ball system.
The numbering from the short rail your 2 balls are on (right side of your diagram) go from 1-5 for each diamond, starting at the upper corner on the side of the rail you will be hitting 1st. The corner is 1, next diamond is 2, next is 3, etc.
The long side rail diamonds opposite the 1st rail you will hit (cueball position) are numbered 1-8, the 1st being the 1st diamond closest to scoring short rail (the right side of the bottom long rail in your diagram) and 8 being in the corner furthest away.
The diamond numbers on the 1st rail you hit (the top long rail in your diagram) are 10-80, 10 being the 1st diamond closest to your scoring rail (where the 2 balls are in you diagram) and 80 being in the corner, although you would never use more than 40, the center diamond.
You would determine where you want the cue ball to hit on the short rail to score the shot, where your cueball is located on the long rail (bottom on your diagram), and multiply those 2 numbers. This will tell you where you must hit on the 1st rail to score the shot.
Examples: Let's say in your diagram you would need the cue ball to hit the middle diamond on the short rail to score (3) and your cue ball is in the corner (8), you would multiply 8x3=24 so you would hit the top long rail at 24, which is close to 2.4 diamonds away from the scoring rail.
Another would be if you still needed to score at 3 and the cueball was laying on the 3rd diamond (3), then you would multiply 3x3=9 and hit .9 diamond closest to the scoring rail.
I hope this makes sense, I never really worked with this much because I was able to use the corner 5 to estimate the 2nd rail fairly well and was able to use running english. This worked fine for me.
The only issues w/deadball systems is that the longer the angle, the tougher it is to judge, because I have found that you needed more speed or play it a little shorter to be accurate. Maybe this system builds in the adjustment, I do not know. Jim just liked showing me stuff since we didn't see each other all that often while I lived in No CA. He was a great guy.
Hope this helps in some way, godd luck in your search.
Dave