Recently saw this. Any thoughts from the denizens of the aiming asylum?? https://www.cuedrills.com/tangent-line-aiming/
Recently saw this. Any thoughts from the denizens of the aiming asylum?? https://www.cuedrills.com/tangent-line-aiming/
They may have mis-phrased it but doesn't the CB leave the OB at a 90/tangent if its not spinning?I skimmed the main page....
As a player that manlipulates the CB with some level of spin on literally every shot, I think this system would require excessive re-calculation. ...but I guess every system has that on some level. That and determining carom angle may just be the most difficult part of the game. Sure a few inches isn't that tough, but if you're no where near a contact rail it screams overly difficult.
To be honest once they claimed: "when the cue ball is sliding and hits an object ball, it always separates at 90 degrees from the cut angle" , I tuned out.
I guess theorically speaking yes...They may have mis-phrased it but doesn't the CB leave the OB at a 90/tangent if its not spinning?
Well, does it or doesn't it???I guess theorically speaking yes...
In theory yes, in practical application the odds of hitting with absolute zero spin are small. Most of the time you can't even strike the CB with a flat cue. Depending on the force of the shot the CB could be hopping. Lots of variables to playing caroms.Well, does it or doesn't it???
Calling Mr.Straightline to the stage....I don't do that anymore. As I recall, it was mostly for thin cuts.
Yes. when i shoot really thin cuts I aim where cueball is going when OB is going to pocket. It is easier than normal aiming. Also straight/almost straight I use same principle.I learned carom billiards at the same time I learned pool. They may seem the same, but I learned them completely differently as far as feeling the shots. For three cushion, I had only a rough idea of where the first object ball was going. At pool, my idea of where the cue ball was going was similarly hazy. As the two games sort of came together for me, I found that on some shots at pool a good way to aim was by controlling where the cue ball went. If the cue ball goes there after contact, then the object ball must go into the pocket, so just send the cue ball there.
I don't do that anymore. As I recall, it was mostly for thin cuts.
The statement is correct even if the cue ball is not sliding.To be honest once they claimed: "when the cue ball is sliding and hits an object ball, it always separates at 90 degrees from the cut angle" , I tuned out.
The statement is correct even if the cue ball is not sliding.
The initial direction off contact regardless of object ball contact is along the tangent line.
Not for a draw shot.........
How bout a making a ball that is frozen to a rail.......
The statement is correct even if the cue ball is not sliding.
The initial direction off contact regardless of object ball contact is along the tangent line.
draw/follow shots both start down the TL then alter direction.Not for a draw shot.........
How bout a making a ball that is frozen to a rail.......
I don't spend enough. The illogic involved has a very tiny safety window. Carom aiming works for the obvious reasons and it's part of contact geometry. I think the value in an aiming systems is it gets the shooter in the habit of shooting the cue ball at another ball with a specific collision in mind.Calling Mr.Straightline to the stage....
I spend too much time in this corner of the forum...lol
Interesting test for those that care enough to try....
Set up any cut shot and use donuts to mark not only the starting points of the CB and OB, but also the 90 degree tangent line path lets say 1ft from the OB. Hit this shot as much as you like, however you like, and see what percentage of the actual tangent paths split the donut down the middle.
Not hit the dount. Split the donut. Seeing as the this 90degree rule is a certainty I'm expecting near 100% results when someone is purposely trying to pull it off.