Waiting for the book with concise diagrams .
Not sure what diagrams there will be but I too am waiting to buy the book and watch the truth series
Waiting for the book with concise diagrams .
Not sure what diagrams there will be but I too am waiting to buy the book and watch the truth series
How fancy can it get ?
ABC reference points.
Left to right always.
Half tip pivot or no pivot .
Do it even better . Base it on contact point even though that shouldn't matter .
2-1 table ratio is what matters .
How fancy can it get ?
ABC reference points.
Left to right always.
Half tip pivot or no pivot .
Do it even better . Base it on contact point even though that shouldn't matter .
2-1 table ratio is what matters .
How fancy can it get ?
ABC reference points.
Left to right always.
Half tip pivot or no pivot .
Do it even better . Base it on contact point even though that shouldn't matter .
2-1 table ratio is what matters .
why is it that that 2/1 ratio so important? mine old rinky dink shadow junk doesn't require 2/1 for certain.....i dont think i ever saw it proven besides that statement that cte works because of 2/1 ratio....always thought that was a little odd sorta?
It's numerological nonsense that began with Hal Houle - here's a part of his ramblings from 20+ years ago:why is it that that 2/1 ratio so important? mine old rinky dink shadow junk doesn't require 2/1 for certain.....i dont think i ever saw it proven besides that statement that cte works because of 2/1 ratio....always thought that was a little odd sorta?
Hal Houle:
Any table has a 2 to 1 ratio; 3 1/2 x 7,
4 x 8, 4 ½ x 9, 5 x 10, 6 x 12. It is always twice as long as it is
wide. The table corners are 90 degree angles. When you lay a cue from
the side pocket to the corner pocket, you are forming an angle of 45
degrees. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the middle diamond
on the same end rail, you are forming an angle of 30 degrees. When you
lay a cue from the side pocket to the first diamond on the same end
rail, you are forming an angle of 15 degrees. When you add up these 3
angles, they total 90 degrees, which is the same angle formed by the
table corners.