lol
And if your initial alignment is to ghost ball - even if your estimate of that isn't exact - you'd be even closer.
The same applies to every other way of aiming.
Get counseling. This topic has made you (even more) crazy.
pj
chgo
You're wrong about that. You can't say that aligning to an invisible object is more or less precise than CTE. If it were that easy there would not be so many devices and templates out there designed to help people "see" the ghost ball. The precision of GB depends ENTIRELY on each individual person's ability to correctly imagine and place a nonexistent object. Some claim to be able to see this "ghost ball" as clearly as a real ball. Others can't see it at all and just guestimate a spot on the cloth to aim to. Others use devices to try to memorize "shot pictures" so that they don't have to actually imagine a ball at all.
Moreover though the CTE system isn't estimating. The CTE line isn't an estimate, it is a physical line that anyone with a laser can show on the table. Finding the shot line using GB IS an estimate. If you took one of these robots that play pool and only use the tracking mode where the actual shot line is projected on the table and you said to players use this laser to estimate the shot line using ghost ball you would find that the shooter would be off considerably on many shots once the tracking is switched on and the actual shot line was projected over the shooter's estimated shot line.
I predict that a shooter who has mastered the CTE method will have lines that are far closer, if not exact, far more often than someone using GB in such a test.
IF one had a template laid on the table that did represent the ghost ball THEN you're right the shooter would be on or extremely close to the real shot line. But no person on earth is allowed to use such a template in a game. (although that would be a fun way to handicap a match)
So, thanks for the insulting attack INSTEAD of looking at the actual information and diagrams I provided. It's ok Pat, since you have no actual working knowledge of the CTE method I can understand why you don't really want to delve into the actual technical aspects. Easier to call me crazy and make the debate emotional instead.
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