What is the distance from the tip to your bridge for most of your shots?
What is the distance from the tip to your bridge for most of your shots?
Easily a foot for me. Bad habit. But, I'm really far sighted.
Right around 8 inches on 'normal' shots. If I want more action I usually lengthen my follow through rather than change my bridge length.
How does more follow through relate to more action?
randyg
I could also be speaking out of my ass but that's my opinion on it.
How does more follow through relate to more action?
randyg
You're kidding, right?
Dale
Why would he be kidding, Dale? The tip is only on the CB for 1/1000th of a second (1/4 of an eye blink). Extended followthrough has no physical effect on the outcome. Dropping the elbow slows the stroke down, because it involves more groups of muscles. A faster swing happens when you choke up a little bit on your grip, and don't pull the cue so far back, as your normal swing, enabling a quicker forward movement that is still pendulum in nature.
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
If you extend the lever by using the whole arm instead of just the forearm you generate more force for the same stroke speed. Using more muscles isn't the issue. You have to raise up your body to accomplish this but it is possible to make the lever longer without slowing down the stroke itself. With correct timing you can raise your upper torso during the stroke itself. Yes it requires good timing and shouldn't ever be taught to anything but advanced players.
You are pivoting from the shoulder instead of the elbow and in effect almost doubling the length of the lever holding the cue.
Look at Mike Masse doing his power draw. He drops his elbow after contact along with a raised upper torso and has increased follow through due to the longer lever he is creating. It results in more follow through but a faster stroke speed so the follow through itself is a side effect of the technique.
http://youtu.be/hbnxQWe_OTg