2.25 - but since you're eyeballing it, not measuring it, the actual number may not matter....the center of the ghost ball has to be 2.75 inches from the center of the OB.
pj
chgo
2.25 - but since you're eyeballing it, not measuring it, the actual number may not matter....the center of the ghost ball has to be 2.75 inches from the center of the OB.
yes, thats what i meant. thanks for the correction2.25 - but since you're eyeballing it, not measuring it, the actual number may not matter.
pj
chgo
1 inch and 1/8 from the contact point is a lot easier to visualize.2.25 - but since you're eyeballing it, not measuring it, the actual number may not matter.
pj
chgo
Getting lectured about playing pool and aiming, by you, is pretty comical.
Lou Figueroa
And it is actually the name of an aiming system. Cranfield's Arrow is a good tool to help with the "inch-and-an-eighth" system.1 inch and 1/8 from the contact point is a lot easier to visualize.
english or irish riverdance...hard to say
reference JB spearing @ the 7 ball
I'm a contact point aimer, but often visualize the ghostball center this way as a starting alignment and as a crosscheck for my final aim line.1 inch and 1/8 from the contact point is a lot easier to visualize.
And if you need help finding the OB contact point, here's a "triangulation" method for that.You can use the object ball as a reference and drop a line from the actual contact point to the cloth and out along the pocket line the same distance, forming a ghost triangle.
Yes, you CAN always go back to ghost ball or whatever you were doing before learning CTE or any other method. You have completely missed my point but that's ok.Huh?
This from the same person who in a video said he could always go back to ghost ball ?
The same person who was hyping and showing a system he really did not even know the proper way of using but was making a ball or two in demo ? Let me guess, he was just pretending to be using it . Should we paste your words here about learning an incredible system that might make you a top 20 someday ? The one where it doesn't matter where the pocket is ?
I like this view. There's something going on with the bottom tangent where if you go a little higher -And if you need help finding the OB contact point, here's a "triangulation" method for that.
Doesn't help you hit the contact point, but it's a start...
pj
chgo
View attachment 588272
That's looks super easy (not)....... How do you know the cut angle without knowing the ghost ball center? The shot you chose to diagram has a center to edge sight line and you chose 30 degrees so it's convenient that you use a 30 degree cut for this but what if the actual cut angle is 31 degrees or 34.4? Can you still use the center to edge sight line? Does pocket margin of error cover it? In all situations? Is this "easy" do for all shots? Once again you are asking a player to imagine something that you can diagram easily but which is unlikely to work well when playing.And if you need help finding the OB contact point, here's a "triangulation" method for that.
Doesn't help you hit the contact point, but it's a start...
pj
chgo
View attachment 588272
Matching the reciprocal section is a well known method called equal/opposite. Joe Tucker calls it Aiming by The Numbers. Easy to diagram, hard to execute over a wide range of shots.I like this view. There's something going on with the bottom tangent where if you go a little higher -
45 degree perpendicular through the center, a vertical line through that point gives you the section of ball being eclipsed. Simply match the reciprocal section on the cue ball and bang. Give or take anyway.
lolThat's looks super easy (not)....... How do you know the cut angle without knowing the ghost ball center? The shot you chose to diagram has a center to edge sight line and you chose 30 degrees so it's convenient that you use a 30 degree cut for this but what if the actual cut angle is 31 degrees or 34.4? Can you still use the center to edge sight line? Does pocket margin of error cover it? In all situations? Is this "easy" do for all shots? Once again you are asking a player to imagine something that you can diagram easily but which is unlikely to work well when playing.
The directions here are to imagine (visualize) the overhead view of the table.
Then ESTIMATE the cut angle which is the angle produced by the crossing of the center to edge sight line and the center object ball travel line.
This then is supposed to give the shooter the contact point. From which the player does what? Oh, you said "doesn't help to HIT the contact point but it's a start."
Shoots down the center to edge line? Determines a ghost ball center exactly 2.25” from object ball centeror 1.125” off the contact point and then shoot down that line? Works for a 30 degree cut as diagrammed by you but not for other angles.
Assuming a player could do the visualizing correctly and then could GUESS the cut angle and then superimpose a projection of that angle onto the object ball it is still not clear how this works on anything but a half-ball hit to get to the GB center without further estimation and adjustment.
I rate this as next to useless for practical use. It is way worse than just getting the contact point (in as much as it can be found accurately) by pointing the cue through the object ball towards the pocket. That you deliberately chose a 30 degree cut to illustrate it says to me that you WANT to sow confusion by using the CTE line to pretend that you can diagram something from 2d to 3d that works and "looks" geometrically correct. So I want to ask you if this is what the fidgeting you do is for? Are you guessing the angle and fidgeting until it feels/looks right?
View attachment 588303
John I can't keep up with you. In the past I would try but I'd rather spend the next 1/2 hour hitting some balls rather than typing stuff that will go in one ear and out the other. There are a couple of things I want do say to set the record straight and hopefully that will be the end of it.
1. Your comment quoted above shows that you either have a hard time understanding what people write, or you intentionally distort comments to discredit the writer and seem more authoritative. Stan says CTE provides objective aiming points such as ABC and edge. Nobody ever said CTE tells you to aim center to edge and shoot. It is, however, part of the process to find the shot line. Period. That reminds me of something Stan said in one of the truth series videos. He said the dominant eye finds the sight line and the non dominant eye finds the aim line before finally finding the shot line. I'm pretty sure this is impossible unless you are Marty Feldman or a gecko.
The subject here is not physics. I understand appeal to authority and you did exactly that, without a valid basis for doing so.2. I never debated in hs or college but I've learned that "appeal to authority" is an invalid debate technique. For example, two students debate global warming and one kid cites his teacher as an authority to show that global warming is real. The teacher is an authority, but his specialty is 19th century French poetry, not physics or meteorology. The fact that the teacher holds a position of authority does not mean he is qualified to comment on global warming. On the other hand, if the subject is physics then experts on physics are valid references.
3. The CTE debate over the last 20 years is much simpler than you make it out to be. Here it is, ready? If you can't prove that your aiming system is objective for 100% of the shots then STFU and don't claim that it is. Saying that you know it is objective and then say you don't know how is absurd. What makes it particularly silly to make that claim is that pool is very complicated and our perceptions are often wrong. examples: on rail shots hit the ball and the rail at the same time...WRONG, keep the cue level...IMPOSSIBLE. History is full of professional players thinking they know what is happening and being completely wrong.
4. Regarding your $500 challenge - it would probably take me to Friday just to find a curtain. I don't recall every having tried to pocket a two or three rail bank shot... ever. I have a more interesting challenge. Why not make the same offer to all of Stan's CTE students. Surely there is one out of the thousands who could simply find the objective shot line and start firing off the 3 rail banks to take the cash, no?
Well there goes 15 minutes.
Maybe you should get some.lol
Dude, take your meds.
pj
chgo
That's looks super easy (not)....... How do you know the cut angle without knowing the ghost ball center? The shot you chose to diagram has a center to edge sight line and you chose 30 degrees so it's convenient that you use a 30 degree cut for this but what if the actual cut angle is 31 degrees or 34.4? Can you still use the center to edge sight line? Does pocket margin of error cover it? In all situations? Is this "easy" do for all shots? Once again you are asking a player to imagine something that you can diagram easily but which is unlikely to work well when playing.
The directions here are to imagine (visualize) the overhead view of the table.
Then ESTIMATE the cut angle which is the angle produced by the crossing of the center to edge sight line and the center object ball travel line.
This then is supposed to give the shooter the contact point. From which the player does what? Oh, you said "doesn't help to HIT the contact point but it's a start."
Shoots down the center to edge line? Determines a ghost ball center exactly 2.25” from object ball centeror 1.125” off the contact point and then shoot down that line? Works for a 30 degree cut as diagrammed by you but not for other angles.
Assuming a player could do the visualizing correctly and then could GUESS the cut angle and then superimpose a projection of that angle onto the object ball it is still not clear how this works on anything but a half-ball hit to get to the GB center without further estimation and adjustment.
I rate this as next to useless for practical use. It is way worse than just getting the contact point (in as much as it can be found accurately) by pointing the cue through the object ball towards the pocket. That you deliberately chose a 30 degree cut to illustrate it says to me that you WANT to sow confusion by using the CTE line to pretend that you can diagram something from 2d to 3d that works and "looks" geometrically correct. So I want to ask you if this is what the fidgeting you do is for? Are you guessing the angle and fidgeting until it feels/looks right?
View attachment 588303
Certainly. I did a video where I showed how hard it is to accurately identify the GB center from a foot above the ball. I am going to nitpick your words above to make an example of how inconsistent this is? You said 2.75" from the OB center. It's 2.25", you wrote it twice. I very much doubt that players are actively saying to themselves let me visually find 2.25" from OB center or 1.125" from contact point and then see a non-existent marker on the table to perfectly align to. They estimate based on experience. And that means that they need to either REALLY try hard to "see" and hold this spot or they are essentially winging it with a loose approximation. This is nearly impossible to do with consistency and if anyone would get up and bet something I am sure I could prove it using the proper setup.Can you clarify this statement in bold? I get that the ghost ball is imaginary, but if you put an actual ball there to act as the ghost ball, wouldn't the center then be visible. I tend to use this method, for admittedly inconsistent results. Meaning, I know that the center of the ghost ball has to be 2.75 inches from the center of the OB.
So even though the GB center isn't technically visible, if a fella knows what 2.75 inches looks like, he should be able to pick a specific point on the cloth that the center of the CB has to pass over in order to make the ball? Then it becomes the task of being able to deliver the center of the CB to that exact location. At least, this makes sense to my addled brain...
So does CTE offer a quicker/easier way to get to that point 2.75 inches from the OB center?
CTE is very simple. 3 angles will center pocket every shot on the table.
Now if you would just watch this 18 hours of video and read this 400 page book you'll understand just how simple it is.
Or maybe not if you're not smart enough.
The absurdity of this thing exceeds the English language's current ability to accurately characterize it.