I would prefer to practice on a tougher table.
IMHO, a Diamond is tougher. The pockets are cut differently on a Diamond, so your shots have to be truer or they will jaw. You can't "cheat the pocket" as much as you can on a Gold Crown.
When I had a home table, it was an Olhausen with 4.25" pockets. It played tougher than a Gold Crown.
Just my 2 cents...
im sort of asking in a round about way is it easier to go from a diamond to a gold crown or the other way around.
if you were to buy a table for your house which would you buy??
from the perspective better to get more practice time on which table??
im sort of asking in a round about way is it easier to go from a diamond to a gold crown or the other way around.
if you were to buy a table for your house which would you buy??
from the perspective better to get more practice time on which table??
I agree 100% with Lance. I play on Iron Willie's tough Diamond Pro-Am with my one pocket player partner on Monday nights, and it keeps you honest. Like Lance mentions, you learn how NOT to use the rails as "bowling alley gutterguards" (i.e. glancing off of the nearest cushion in the direction of the pocket) when playing on a tough Diamond. You have to aim and execute to hit the pocket precisely.
It works, for when you get on a standard-equipped table, you find it a lot easier, and sloppily-hit shots -- i.e. "bowling alley gutterguard" (glancing off the cushion on the way down a rail to the pocket), where you flinch and say to yourself, "uh-oh, I think I missed that one" as the object ball is traveling to the pocket -- actually ends up pocketing on that table. Playing on a tough Diamond sets higher execution expectations in your mind, which is a good thing.
-Sean
I have a 9' Diamond with 4.25" pockets, and I wholeheartedly disagree with you.
My Diamond holds balls hit with a normal speed down the rail better than a Gold Crown - the champion of the trampoline effect. Need I say more?
When I go to any public table the pockets look like bread baskets, so I will sure as hell recommend practicing on a tight Diamond table. It only takes me a few minutes to get used to the Gold Crown's banks, which are great BTW, since I grew up using these rails. So, with the Diamond, you will get the added advantage of practicing with those funky rails, which appear on a lot of small Daimond tables also.
Regards, WW
An interesting sidenote is that snooker players play to the opposite side of the pocket than pool players -- i.e. away from the rail that's in the direction of the shot. And the reasoning is the same -- you can't "gutterguard" a shot on a snooker table. It absolutely will NOT go in with those rounded pocket knuckles if you glance the closest adjoining rail on the way in. Rather, you want any error to be to the far side of the pocket, and you hit the shot gently to give the ball the maximum potential to wobble in.
-Sean
More practice time spent on a standard pocket Diamond will equate to a better investment of your practice time by comparison to practicing on a standard pocket GC.im sort of asking in a round about way is it easier to go from a diamond to a gold crown or the other way around.
if you were to buy a table for your house which would you buy??
from the perspective better to get more practice time on which table??
I must be in the minority here because I was always instructed to aim toward the far side of the pocket. We call the short side down the rail the sucker side. I've never played snooker but I'd like to try it. Plus, overcutting makes the leave for your opponent tougher than undercutting.
Once someone experiences what you are talking about they get it. If someone is used to a sloppy table when they go to a tight table more happens then just a few missed balls. They can find themselves panicking and missing so bad the pockets could not be big enough for the balls to go. Once the confidence goes you are done.I use to play on Connelly's that were very easy pockets. Playing there for years hurt my game because now I play out of a place with tougher tables and its taken adjustment.
Now I try to get as much practice on a Triple-Shimmed table so when I go to play on the normal tables it's a lot easier. Practicing on the tougher tables gets you to focus and be precise. Now I pocket the balls cleaner on the normal table and play better too. I go the extreme of getting a couple of hours of practice on the Triple shim and then go play league/tournaments on the normal tables. I would suggest you spend "practice" days on the tougher table and when it comes to league/tournament days you practice on the same tables you will be playing on.
With a Diamond you get Artemis rubber you also get real wood, you also have a table crafted here in the United States. A room open here in the Cleveland area 3 years ago when the Brunswicks were delivered all the boxes were from China. Also if you try to tighten the pockets on a Brunswick they spit the balls out , that is not the case with a Diamond.im sort of asking in a round about way is it easier to go from a diamond to a gold crown or the other way around.
if you were to buy a table for your house which would you buy??
from the perspective better to get more practice time on which table??