Regarding the question: how can a handful of visuals cover all ranges of shots? The pundents will tell you there are gaps, and you must be adjusting something to make the system work. This is far from reality.
What is important to realize, CTE PRO ONE is a visual system. It is not based on discreet angles. The video below is a prime example of how a single visual/pivot covers two completely different shots.
The first shot is straight-in. I'm using a "Thick A" with right pivot (or outside.) The shot goes straight in. Then I setup a shot where the CB/OB alignment is straight into the end rail, and I execute the exact same visual: "Thick A" with right pivot. This should result in the OB going straight into the end rail, correct? WRONG! It is the solution to the two-rail bank. I did nothing different here, but the outcome is different from a pencil and protractor point-of-view.
The details of why and how this works are directly related to the visuals for any given CB/OB/Pocket relationship. Pool is a game of optical illusions, and CTE embraces these illusions and makes them powerful weapons for pocketing balls. This is just a small sample of the power of this system. If you execute your visuals and pivot perfectly, the solution is the heart of a given pocket. In my own tests I can take any CB/OB relationship on a table, mark them with paper reinforcers for resetting, then start moving through the visuals and pivots to find a solution to every pocket on the table. Note there are exceptions, some relations provide no possible solution to every pocket.
[edit] I removed the video, there was an editing mistake... will redo later.
What is important to realize, CTE PRO ONE is a visual system. It is not based on discreet angles. The video below is a prime example of how a single visual/pivot covers two completely different shots.
The first shot is straight-in. I'm using a "Thick A" with right pivot (or outside.) The shot goes straight in. Then I setup a shot where the CB/OB alignment is straight into the end rail, and I execute the exact same visual: "Thick A" with right pivot. This should result in the OB going straight into the end rail, correct? WRONG! It is the solution to the two-rail bank. I did nothing different here, but the outcome is different from a pencil and protractor point-of-view.
The details of why and how this works are directly related to the visuals for any given CB/OB/Pocket relationship. Pool is a game of optical illusions, and CTE embraces these illusions and makes them powerful weapons for pocketing balls. This is just a small sample of the power of this system. If you execute your visuals and pivot perfectly, the solution is the heart of a given pocket. In my own tests I can take any CB/OB relationship on a table, mark them with paper reinforcers for resetting, then start moving through the visuals and pivots to find a solution to every pocket on the table. Note there are exceptions, some relations provide no possible solution to every pocket.
[edit] I removed the video, there was an editing mistake... will redo later.
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