When people say it varies from person to person, does it still "trend" towards light vs. heavy? Like maybe it's ideal at 16 oz for a fit 180 lb guy, 16.5 for a similarly built 200 lb guy, 17 for 220, 18 for 240, and so on?
I don't think I can offer a satisfactory answer, other than that I agree that as the weight (mass) of whatever gets moving during the break stroke (e.g., hand, arm, body) increases, so would the optimum cue weight. If the typical choice of general playing cue weight (18oz - 20 oz or so) is based solely on what is a good match for their hand-arm mass (though no one of course does this explicitly) , then working backwards, you can figure out the typical hand-arm equivalent mass. From that, simple physics says that you should use a break cue of similar weight, or possibly a little heavier, in that you might be able to generate greater muscle force with a heavier cue. But the nagging question is, why have we come to feel comfortable with general playing cues in the range of weights we typically choose? Is it a good match to body mass, or are there other reasons?
Or are we saying it is so dependent on fast vs. slow twitch fibers that the 200 lb. guys might be ideal at 22 oz. while there's a bunch of 250 lb guys who are ideal at 17?
I guess that's another complication.
Is there a way to take the muscles of the breaker out of the equation and calculate strictly based on the stick?
I don't see how? As mr_griff indicated, the basic problem is this:
- The cueball responds to the momentum of the stick. Once the tip reaches the ball, a player's hand-arm mass has nothing to with it.
- A heavier cue has more momentum than a lighter one moving at the same speed.
- Given the same maximum accelerating force applied by the muscles, a heavier cue won't be going as fast when it reaches the cueball.
- The accelerating force supplied by the muscles has to propel both the stick and the hand-arm mass (and whatever else you get going). But once the tip reaches the ball, the hand-arm mass is dead weight and contributes nothing to the momentum the cueball reacts to (soft tissue coupling).
Putting that all together, you could figure the ideal weight IF you knew the other masses involved (hand-arm etc.) But therein lies the rub. You could try out sticks of different weights to determine that, indirectly, but then you've arrived at the end goal of the exercise without any need to know those numbers.
Frankly, as several posters have indicated, I don't think it's important. The math (though a simplification) suggests that you can be pretty far off the optimum weight and see little difference. Granted, I'm ignoring the fast/slow twitch aspect, but I can't see how a robotic substitute can offer an answer, or that you can look at the stick alone.
Jim