Have you ever owned/played with a LD shaft? Take a 13mm solid-maple shaft and say, a 12mm LD(Pred,OB,etc). Put on same tips and chalk up. Now, shoot the cue ball from center-table to the middle diamond on end rail using 1.5tips spin, medium hard. The LD shaft will come closer to the target every time. Its not the friction between the tip and the cueball that causes this its the difference in the endmass of the two shafts. There's a big difference between deflection and a pure miscue which is what you describe in the no-chalk scenario.Yes, I have looked at all of the science being applied to the LD explanation. I have seen the research, videos, discussions, etc. I'm well aware of the perception. I'm not saying a new tip with fresh chalk will deflect less, and I'm not saying tip end mass has nothing to do with the way the shaft deflects in relation to the CB deflection. What I am saying is that we are missing something, trying to do a math problem without all of the factors.
My point is very clear. Remove the chalk from ANY shaft, and wet the tip to reduce friction. Now play pool. What happens? The exact same deflection(s) that occur when the CB strikes an OB. I'm not being snarky, either. Nor am I flat earthing it. I 100% believe science, but only when the science is thorough. You cannot leave out factors & reach an accurate conclusion. Friction is obviously a major factor, and by the very nature of chalking it is variable. That's my position, for now. It's always been an interesting conversation that has never satisfied. The concrete has yet to cure, so there's still some soft spots. Compare & contrast the deflection properties of ANY shaft with chalk vs. no chalk, wet tip. Basically friction vs. no friction. It's a simple comparison. Do that, then explain again to me how all of the science your using to describe LD applies.
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