I have, it squirts the cb quite a bit. Try putting a tip on a metal shaft and watch what happens.
A metal shaft has a ton of end mass. How are you sure it's the lack of shaft deflection that is at the root of the problem?
I have, it squirts the cb quite a bit. Try putting a tip on a metal shaft and watch what happens.
It wasn't the speed of sound Fred and Dave were referring to, it was the transverse wave. That's something that can be seen physically as an actual motion in the shaft. The speed of that wave is much slower than the speed of sound.
The end mass of the shaft is being displaced in space, which causes an equal but opposite reaction in the CB, sending it in the opposite direction. So, if the CB departs from the tip before the wave has time to move farther than 8" or so, how can the butt possible have any effect on deflection at all?
I think we are blessed to have guys like Freddie, Dr. Dave, Bob Jewett, Mike Page, etc. on this board to give us the straight dope. What we do with that knowledge is an individual choice. I try not to think about any of it because very little of it affects my game, but I refuse to deny what they demonstrate through careful experimentation and scientific analysis.
... but if someone were able to develop a shaft with NO DEFLECTION... does that mean that the number of top level pros would significantly go up?
Try this for yourself. Take 5 or 6 different cue butts with the same joint pin and put the LD shaft on each one. Be glad to send you one of my 6-pie laminated butts as one of the group for you to try.
Send me five or six different cue butts along with the shaft and I'll give it a very serious try. I may even buy one of your LD shafts if I like it enough.
As it is, I'm a one cue kinda guy. Don't even own a break cue or a jump cue. Once I get around to making some cues, though, I will certainly take you up on it.
It won't change my opinion that this is a very subjective way to test for deflection, though. Even the best players never even knew it existed before it was pointed out to them. I feel even Mosconi himself would find it hard to quantify deflection in this manner.
Edit to add:
Sorry, I just re-read your post and realized you are speaking of laminated butts, not shafts. If I can get my hands on a LD shaft I may still try your butt against others I can come up with. I don't "believe" in using LD shafts, so I don't own one.
Will you be at SBE? Perhaps you can demonstrate this there. I'll be there Friday-Sunday.
Cheers![]()
I was speaking about the difference of a shaft, laminated or otherwise, on different butts, laminated or otherwise. Surely you know 5 others with a cue having a 3/8x10 pin, you don't need to own them all. Try switching an LDshaft from one cue to another and see what happens.
You can do a little math test. Take the mass of a 12.75mm shaft with a .250" hole 4" deep. Now figure out what diameter a shaft, with no end hole, would be at this same mass. Do the 2 shafts have the same deflection value? If not, why?
Since you believe that only the first few inches of the shaft effect deflection than it follows that the taper of the shaft is irrelevant as are other factors. So tapers are simply for looks and how your fingers slide up and down the shaft? Schuler would have disagreed with you as would a number of other cue makers. Scientific testing is repeatable, meaning you can get the same results again. The deflection tests show that not only do 3 people strike the cueball differently than each other but also can not strike the cueball the same twice in a row. Averaging the results is not indicative of the true value of deflection. If someone with better mechanics than comes along and has repeatedly lower deflection values has the real deflection of the shaft changed? That one person has consistently higher deflection results than the others prove that the shaft has more deflection?
As for SBE, no I will not be there. But there may be someone who will that can show you. Will get back to you about this.
A metal shaft has a ton of end mass. How are you sure it's the lack of shaft deflection that is at the root of the problem?
You alluded to it in an earlier post, but not sure you quite understand it yet. Yes, a metal shaft has a ton of end mass. That means that it is stiffer, and will deflect less. The less mass, the easier for the shaft to deflect from the cb, thereby, the less the cb will squirt.
With a very stiff shaft, such as a metal rod, even if the end mass was the same, it is not pliable enough to bend out of the way of the cb. So, you will still get the squirt. You need low end mass of a pliable material, such as wood, to lessen the squirt of the cb and increase the deflection of the shaft.
Neil, since you actually tried this out in real life, I wasn't sure you understood it, either. Lol
What if that same end mass that was in the metal shaft was attached directly in front of a section of shaft that allowed it to bend out if the way in the exact manner that a wooden shaft would? Would that yield an LD shaft as well?
Obviously, a well-designed cue-testing machine would provide the best results. However, if one doesn't have such a machine, I think the setup and procedure described and demonstrated in the following video produces fairly consistent and reliable results if one is careful and has a decent stroke (and throws out the shots that are obviously poorly hit):... how would I go about quantifying the amount of CB deflection without using some purpose-built machine? If you have an easy test I can set up for this I'd be more than happy to give it the old college try.
Technically, nobody hits the CB exactly where they are trying to hit it, but the pros come very close most of the time. The vast majority of amateurs don't.It not only shortens the learning curve, but it's largest assest is that it is less susceptible to small inaccuracies of hit on the cb. Please look again at KMRUNOUT's post #102. He explained very well what the main advantage of an LD shaft is. And, that advantage is bigger than some care to give it credit for.
Everyone likes to think they hit the cb where they are trying to hit it. But, unless one has had specific training on it, very few actually do.
If people are really curious about what causes squirt (AKA "cue ball deflection") and what doesn't, check out the "What causes squirt?" page. It contains detailed descriptions, illustrations, and supporting resources.You alluded to it in an earlier post, but not sure you quite understand it yet. Yes, a metal shaft has a ton of end mass. That means that it is stiffer, and will deflect less. The less mass, the easier for the shaft to deflect from the cb, thereby, the less the cb will squirt.
With a very stiff shaft, such as a metal rod, even if the end mass was the same, it is not pliable enough to bend out of the way of the cb. So, you will still get the squirt. You need low end mass of a pliable material, such as wood, to lessen the squirt of the cb and increase the deflection of the shaft.
Going by YOUR statement, yes. I only say yes, because you said it would bend in the exact same manner as a wooden shaft. However, I don't believe you can get it to bend the exact same way. And, if it doesn't, (meaning the last 8-9" of the shaft), then, no. No, because only the last 9" or so matter. By the time the force was transferred from the stiff material to the pliable material, the cb would be gone already.
As I was editing my last post to insert some detail, the thought of a bag of cues each marked with their respective pivot points popped into my head. Figured at least some of you guys would enjoy that...
... So, if the CB departs from the tip before the wave has time to move farther than 8" or so, how can the butt possible have any effect on deflection at all? ...
Where exactly is anybody "aiming" the stick?[...]we are biological organisms who are largely controlled by anatomy, physiology, our perception, our experience, and some pretty mysterious wetware making decisions we're not even aware of.
Sorry, man, I respect your opinion a lot, but I gotta disagree with you here. They are exactly like a LZR racing suit. Maybe not as pronounced a difference, but if it is true that the best players miss less with LD shafts then you really have to have them because everybody else has them.
At the B and C level LD or HD cues does not really matter much they miss too many shots mainly due to stroke errors. At high level missing one or two shots it will mean the game and probably the match. IMO switching to LD will certinly improves potting skills especially when stun is not used.
Neil, since you actually tried this out in real life, I wasn't sure you understood it, either. Lol
What if that same end mass that was in the metal shaft was attached directly in front of a section of shaft that allowed it to bend out if the way in the exact manner that a wooden shaft would? Would that yield an LD shaft as well?