I watched the video, thanks for sharing.
@Bob Jewett @dr_dave @Cornerman @nataddrho
Every squirt testing machine I've seen pictures/video/text descriptions of has been roughly the same. An arm holding a cue stick on a real table, with real cloth, striking a cue ball, and measuring how far the ball moved off center on the end rail. Provisions (on some setups) are made to minimize the swerve effects, such as shooting very hard, and removing the end rail to make the cue perfectly level.
Thinking outside the box, what if the whole idea was redesigned to eliminate cloth friction entirely, and eliminate the large and somewhat permanent fixture on the tester's pool table.
How about something like a 4" PVC pipe that slips over the test cue. The cue and PVC pipe would be perfectly vertical. It would have internal provisions to center the test cue (and allow some compliance like a bridge hand does). A CB could be dropped from the top of the pipe so it hits the tip, then bounces off. There could be a hole in the top of the pipe that the CB just fits though, and that hole could slide to adjust how much "spin" is on the ball. There would be some measuring device to see how much the dropped ball "deflected" sideways off of the tip. The measuring device could be some sort of vision system (nowadays an iPhone in slow motion might work), or maybe even the DigiBall could be the test ball, and use its built in accelerometer to measure how far the CB deflected.
Pros are this could be a very compact setup compared to a robot setup that takes up the whole table. More compact means less materials, and usually a lower cost. It could even be offered for sale as a self contained product. No swerve since no friction.
Cons off the top of my head would be since its dependent on gravity, it would be very important the tube is leveled vertically. Another con is this a new concept, so it would need to be developed and find out its flaws. Thoughts?