I have not seen any mention on the placement of the bridge hand with regards to aiming in the traditional sense. Does anyone have a process or technique where the placement of the bridge hand plays a critical role in aiming?
Last time I looked, a bridge is a bridge.So I guess nobody can aim when a bridge is used?
Are you referring to one of these?So I guess nobody can aim when a bridge is used?
I hate it when a bridge has sharp edges, especially those common, cheap pot metal bridge heads that have a flash that the manufacturer is too lazy to remove. Those can really tear up a wooden shaft. I avoid the problem by using a CF shaft and trying to always have a Russo (nylon) bridge head available.... Maybe you mean a bridge doesn’t have edges…?
As a noob I used to adjust by subtle thumb movement in the forward hand. Problem with this is horizontal travel requires sweeping the whole arm. I recall a wristwatch also helped as a framing reference. Don't do any of that anymore. These days, by the time I'm ready to pull the trigger I'm looking past the bridge hand.I have not seen any mention on the placement of the bridge hand with regards to aiming in the traditional sense. Does anyone have a process or technique where the placement of the bridge hand plays a critical role in aiming?
The rifle has to be manually adjusted to hit the contact point. Pool resolution is a couple orders lower and can be scoped out sufficiently to include the stick placement. Certainly your fractional aiming requires subtle, in stance, front and backhand calibration. (?)Aiming is done with the eyes, then you line the cue stick up in accordance with what you see in order to send the cb to where it needs to go. Similar to sighting down a long-barrel rifle, the hand that supports the barrel is just that - support.
The rifle has to be manually adjusted to hit the contact point. Pool resolution is a couple orders lower and can be scoped out sufficiently to include the stick placement. Certainly your fractional aiming requires subtle, in stance, front and backhand calibration. (?)
Here's the problem I have with that. The shot is built into the rifle. No matter where you point it, the shot comes identically out the muzzle. The pool shot is like an expanded version of the firing mechanism and because of the organic nature of the system, adjustment tends to corrupt the firing.
Shouldn't it be the cueball isn't as consistent as a bullet coming out of a rifle? The similarity would be the pool stroke can be good or bad the same as an incorrect trigger pull or correct one by the index finger. Both can cause their projectiles to go straight or be pushed/pulled. In the case of a firearm, it can also go high or low in addition to left or right. In pool it would be a high miscue or low jumped ball.I understand where you're coming from, the pool stroke isn't as consistent as a bullet coming out of a rifle - we aren't machines.
Herein lies a major difference that causes all of the problems on pool forums. With a rifle or a pistol, you have a front sight and a rear sight that need to be linked correctly to the TARGET. That's IT unless it's a fairly long distance and wind needs to be taken in account along with gravity.The final action (stroking the cue or pulling the trigger) is different, but the aiming process is the same
We are actually. The most versatile machines in the world. The only real problem is the control module.I understand where you're coming from, the pool stroke isn't as consistent as a bullet coming out of a rifle - we aren't machines. The final action (stroking the cue or pulling the trigger) is different, but the aiming process is the same.... look at the target, position the body to the target, position the cue/barrel to the target, then shoot.
I know a couple of local players that do this as well and for literally decades... On rare days they can take some games from strong players. Usually they're 'aiming method' produces incredible inconsistency.I aim with the stick above the shot. I test shoot anything iffy as well. This requires my bridge hand. It's funny how all this is built into the act of pool but the majority of players go right past this and run through their pedantics, focusing elsewhere.
IMO, the bridge hand is quite literally the single most improtant aspect to aiming correctly. If your bridge hand is wrong. You're either correcting or missing.I have not seen any mention on the placement of the bridge hand with regards to aiming in the traditional sense. Does anyone have a process or technique where the placement of the bridge hand plays a critical role in aiming?
You gotta be consistent at it. Meaning the same schtick, every shot.I know a couple of local players that do this as well and for literally decades... On rare days they can take some games from strong players. Usually they're 'aiming method' produces incredible inconsistency.