lol...your material is just not good enough for the aiming forum.
Let's see some examples of your posts that are "good enough".
pj
chgo
lol...your material is just not good enough for the aiming forum.
It amazing that with being able to describe how to use CTE, that a drawing can not be produced on what is being described.
Could it be because a sphere doesn’t have a edge?
However before we get into where to aim that edge to A-B-C, as many have said on here, you must have a straight consistent stroke.
Nothing is 'magic' when there is a shoddy stroke.
Classifying Solid Figures
Solid figures are three-dimensional objects, meaning they have length, width, and height. Because they have three dimensions, they have depth and take up space in our universe. Solid figures are identified according to the features that are unique to each type of solid. Specifically, you can observe the numbers of faces, edges, and vertices, as well as the shape of the base.
The flat surfaces of a solid figure are its faces, or sides as they are commonly called. The base is the face on which the figure rests. The edge of a solid figure is the line segment where two faces meet. A vertex (plural: vertices) is the corner that is formed where the ends of the line segments of two or more faces meet.
A sphere is a solid figure that has no faces, edges, or vertices. This is because it is completely round; it has no flat sides or corners.
[Please pay particular attention to the last paragraph]
There seems to be growing evidence that round objects don't have edges. It might logically follow that there is no such thing as CTE.
Duckie?
Lol
Classifying Solid Figures
Solid figures are three-dimensional objects, meaning they have length, width, and height. Because they have three dimensions, they have depth and take up space in our universe. Solid figures are identified according to the features that are unique to each type of solid. Specifically, you can observe the numbers of faces, edges, and vertices, as well as the shape of the base.
The flat surfaces of a solid figure are its faces, or sides as they are commonly called. The base is the face on which the figure rests. The edge of a solid figure is the line segment where two faces meet. A vertex (plural: vertices) is the corner that is formed where the ends of the line segments of two or more faces meet.
A sphere is a solid figure that has no faces, edges, or vertices. This is because it is completely round; it has no flat sides or corners.
[Please pay particular attention to the last paragraph]
What a load of crap....does sphere have a bottom and a top????
lol
Let's see some examples of your posts that are "good enough".
pj
chgo
Or pay for a lesson from a certified Pro1 instructor. Or pay $75 or more for the book whenever it becomes available, and hope it's not just a recap of everything you've already seen, heard, and tried. After these options, if you still find yourself struggling with it, move on. Or keep working at it. That's the beauty of life -- your life if yours, nobody else's. So do whatever you want. When it comes to pocketing pool balls, you can stick with almost any method and eventually get it working consistently. It could take weeks, months, or sometimes years, but with enough practice you'll eventually get it working.
That's a point well made. In actuality, the place where the tip strikes the ball would most accurately be called "the nearest point on the near side," not the center. This is becoming rather depressing. I am getting images of rabid idiots arguing for the last 25 years about a non-existent topic. Say, how do you write a book about a non-existent topic?
Don't ask me, ask a basketball. Or better yet, ask LeBron.
I just asked a basketball and it said thats all its made of is edges.
That's a point well made. In actuality, the place where the tip strikes the ball would most accurately be called "the nearest point on the near side," not the center. This is becoming rather depressing. I am getting images of rabid idiots arguing for the last 25 years about a non-existent topic. Say, how do you write a book about a non-existent topic?
Or watch the Truth Series on youtube that will be released at around the same time as the book. Guess what that will cost you? Here's a hint, it will be less then a 10 dollar book on amazon.
Why in the world would Stan spend $40,000 to publish and print a couple thousand books, then undermine potential sales by teaching the system for FREE in his "truth" series? I believe the truth series will be sales pitches, talking points, hype about 2 by 1 surfaces and how 15, 30, and 45 add up to 90, therefore they always connect to the pockets, etc....
If the truth series will provide a complete lesson on CTE, then Stan will not sell many books. Most people won't pay $75 for something they can get for free, unless the free stuff doesn't help them all that much.