the wood has to be very stiff or the smaller size will be detrimental.
When I get out of position (or the opponent puts me there) I have to use "quick english" (Pinning Style) to alter the angle of the cue ball off the cushion. This comes up for safeties and also for position play. On bar tables this comes up much less often and on 10' tables it comes up very often.
A smaller shaft, from my experience, gets quicker, more accurate spin on the cue ball. I would suggest between a 11.75 and 12.25 to get best results. You could get smaller, however the wood has to be very stiff or the smaller size will be detrimental.
I have a really old Bludworth shaft that is 11mm, it's a weapon when I'm playing well, however, if my stroke isn't 100% I have trouble shooting off rails with that size.
Interesting. What do you mean you need quicker, more accurate spin for a big table?
When I get out of position (or the opponent puts me there) I have to use "quick english" (Pinning Style) to alter the angle of the cue ball off the cushion. This comes up for safeties and also for position play. On bar tables this comes up much less often and on 10' tables it comes up very often.
A smaller shaft, from my experience, gets quicker, more accurate spin on the cue ball. I would suggest between a 11.75 and 12.25 to get best results. You could get smaller, however the wood has to be very stiff or the smaller size will be detrimental.
I have a really old Bludworth shaft that is 11mm, it's a weapon when I'm playing well, however, if my stroke isn't 100% I have trouble shooting off rails with that size.