Best 7’ table other than Diamond!

I am also goingto be in the market for a new table in the not so distant future and have always wanted a Diamond and have not given a single thought to another brand...but after reading the post above that they are 1/2 price of a Diamaond and most feel the are equal or some people even sayingthey play better, well who doesnt want to save a few grand. I can not seem to locate the REBCO website?
if this is true, this would be the single reason - REBCO from California. I actually prefer them to Diamonds. and about half the price.
You preferred a Diamond but In 2 minutes you couldn't find a Rebco website and went to preferring a Rebco table over Diamond???
 
Fastone - I am not sure you are reading this correctly, I have always wanted a diamond, but if a rebco plays the same or better, it would be worth looking into


Gideon is correct
 
To me the first question is whether you want to play in tournaments or leagues etc and if so what they play on.

In my area, 90% of league and BB tournaments are on Diamonds, maybe 10% on Valleys (although one place just got the Predator tables). I found Diamond BB to be very fast when I first tried them but now I feel very comfortable on them. If I couldn’t afford a Diamond (and since the new good BBs from other manufacturers are similarly priced) I would get a used Valley with Ridgebacks to try to approximate the Diamonds as best I could.
 
Fastone - I am not sure you are reading this correctly, I have always wanted a diamond, but if a rebco plays the same or better, it would be worth looking into


Gideon is correct
if this is true, this would be the single reason - REBCO from California. I actually prefer them to Diamonds. and about half the price.
If you read the 2nd quote it reads like you prefer Rebco and then mention that they are 1/2 the price of a Diamond. sorry for the confusion.
 
I was quoting someone else in my reponse, but I see how this could be confusing,


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If you read the 2nd quote it reads like you prefer Rebco and then mention that they are 1/2 the price of a Diamond. sorry for the confusion.
Just to make clear, I prefer REBCO 7ft tables to 7ft Diamonds. And the good part is they are 1/2 the price of a Diamond. That said if you play league or tournaments on Diamonds, better practice on one. I like 9 ft REBCO tables also. Bob makes a great table, IMO.
 
Depends on if you can get it in your house. If you would have trouble moving a bar box in it could limit your options. Rasson would be good as it is commercial size. I prefer Diamond but the Rasson would play good if set up right. I would get a Valley before the home table brands if you want a commercial level table. You can get the parts and rails etc…
Corners look at little soft on the overhead of the tournaments the Rassons are played on. They are tight but doesn't appear they left much shelf for getting them that tight. I'd like to see an overhead of the Olhausen, I had one, it was not hurting for shelf but that was quite a while ago.
 
olhausen are very well made tables and look good in a home. since when you buy you are going to be putting on the cloth fix the rattle issue that bothers many.
they are cheaper than diamonds and brunswick. look better in your home. and can be found easily used from others that didnt use their home table or are moving for great prices.
 
The Rasson tables are pretty good for the money. The Acurra is reasonably priced, looks nice and plays well. I have sold those to several pool halls.
 
Hello all! I’m sure this question has come up before but here goes. I know the Diamond tables are arguably the best tables made but I’d like some input on other 7’ tables that are well built and play good. I’ve heard good things about Kasson, Connelly, and Cannon tables. Does anybody own one of these and can share some input?
Again, I know the Diamond is the king of the bar table but it’s not an option!
Thanks in advance!
If it says Dynamo anywhere on the damn table, run the other direction.
👍
 
I just got back from BCAPL in Vegas and they had Predator tables out there. The pockets were a bit loose for my liking but they seemed to bank and play well in my opinion.
 
I just got back from BCAPL in Vegas and they had Predator tables out there. The pockets were a bit loose for my liking but they seemed to bank and play well in my opinion.
The pockets on those tables were terrible. They were too wide, cut straight to allow poorly struck balls to fall, and the cut of the slate came almost to the center of the pocket between the two points. Couple all that with new cloth and you could make balls even if you hit a full diamond up the rail.
 
The pockets on those tables were terrible. They were too wide, cut straight to allow poorly struck balls to fall, and the cut of the slate came almost to the center of the pocket between the two points. Couple all that with new cloth and you could make balls even if you hit a full diamond up the rail.
That's how it looks in the overhead of the matches I've watched.
 
I played on a Predator barbox at last year's Expo for about 20 minutes. It played perfect to me, including the pockets. The only thing I didn't like was the "tink" sound the balls made when hitting the pocket.

You guys are forgetting that most players, even serious players, can't run a rack on a Valley. Easy pockets are ok imo. (And the Predator pockets are nowhere as easy as a stock Valley). Super tough pockets like on a 9' Diamond take the fun out of the game. Medium tough pockets like on a 7' Diamond (shorter shelf than the 9' with the same pocket cut) is about the max difficulty tables should be for 99% of the players, imo.
 
I played on a Predator barbox at last year's Expo for about 20 minutes. It played perfect to me, including the pockets. The only thing I didn't like was the "tink" sound the balls made when hitting the pocket.

You guys are forgetting that most players, even serious players, can't run a rack on a Valley. Easy pockets are ok imo. (And the Predator pockets are nowhere as easy as a stock Valley). Super tough pockets like on a 9' Diamond take the fun out of the game. Medium tough pockets like on a 7' Diamond (shorter shelf than the 9' with the same pocket cut) is about the max difficulty tables should be for 99% of the players, imo.
Overhead I was referring to was at a pro event.
 
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