@Dan White
if where you put your head allows you to see straight and right/left cuts equally
isnt that your personal vision center?
is your nose angled to the shot line or parrallel?
i will assume its angled so the following is wrong if thats not true
is it possible your description of finding where the cue feels naturally cued in a straight line for your set up
just means you have found the correct line/angle of the cue for how your body works and your head position is still in your personal vision center?
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from dr dave
How can I determine the head position and eye alignment necessary for me to have the best aiming accuracy and consistency?
Having your head aligned properly is the most important fundamental of pool. “
How to Easily Find Your Vision Center” (BD, June, 2023) and “
Aim, Align, Sight – Part II: Visual Alignment” (BD, July, 2011) covers this topic fairly well, as do the following videos, one from
Vol. I of the
Video Encyclopedia of Pool Practice (VEPP):
Your
vision center is the head and eye alignment, relative to the cue, that allows you to see a center-ball, straight-in shot as straight, with the tip appearing to be at the center of the CB.
For some people, this might be with the cue under their dominant eye (e.g., if they have strong eye dominance and/or vision impairment in the other eye). For others, it might be with the cue under their nose, or somewhere else between (or even outside of) their eyes. To be accurate and consistent with both straight-in and cut shots, you should always position your “vision center” over the desired aiming line for the shot. See
shot sighting for more information (and other approaches).
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so dr dave doesnt say your vision center HAS to be near your dominant eye (even if it could be the most common place)
the fact that for you its near your non dominant eye doen not negate the concept of vision center
and again to me it seems you found YOUR PERSONAL VISION CENTER
i could be wrong