Brunswick Centennial cloth - anyone?

Keeper

Registered
I'm looking for some opinions on the Brunswick Centennial cloth. I understand it's a Teflon cloth so that it's stain resistant and am wondering if that creates a significant playability difference from, say Simonis 860. Does the ball skid more? Anyone playing on it and notice a major difference? Thanks!
 
Keeper said:
I'm looking for some opinions on the Brunswick Centennial cloth. I understand it's a Teflon cloth so that it's stain resistant and am wondering if that creates a significant playability difference from, say Simonis 860. Does the ball skid more? Anyone playing on it and notice a major difference? Thanks!

I'm no table mechanic but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night ;) . Seriously, I am not a mechanic but I do have the Centennial cloth on my Brunswick table. It plays fast. The balls do not grab as good as a nappy cloth will. If I had to do it over again, I would have gone with my first instincts and gotten the Simonis cloth. I am not totally unhappy with the Centennial cloth, it's just that I stupidly fell for the sales pitch that it is stain-resistant. And, it is, except at MY house there ain't gonna be no beverages close enough to the cloth to ever get spilled on it anyway. I would rather have cloth that the balls grab a little better, though I can still manage table-length draw shots if needed. Hope this info helps.

Maniac
 
The Centennial cloth plays pretty good. I have played quite a bit on both. I think it is thicker than simonis. Simonis is a better choice in my opinion. You have a couple of different playability choices from them. I am not a big fan of chemically treated cloths. Simonis will resist liquid long enough to avoid stains. As long as you aren't going crazy. What they don't tell you with the treated cloth is that when the cloth wears, those friction burn marks and stick marks do not resist liquid anymore.
 
Last edited:
Keeper said:
I'm looking for some opinions on the Brunswick Centennial cloth. I understand it's a Teflon cloth so that it's stain resistant and am wondering if that creates a significant playability difference from, say Simonis 860. Does the ball skid more? Anyone playing on it and notice a major difference? Thanks!


I would say the cloth in question plays most like Championship 3030. I know it acts about the same when installing, and playing is quite similar. I install more tables then I play pool, so from an installers it is like the Chapmionship.
 
I have the teflon-treated Centennial on my home table, and the tables where I played league for a year had 860. I'd be hard pressed to choose between them. I'd say that the Centennial may be slightly slower, but that could be due to the league tables being more worn. I could not tell in any way that the Centennial cloth was treated; it simply feels like cloth. It takes english just fine, and I don't notice skidding to any significant degree.

My home table gets quite a bit of use, and the Centennial cloth is still wearing very well after 2 years.

One word of warning: if you get the Centennial, make sure you have a high quality cue ball. It has the reputation of being susceptible to burn marks. Sure enough, after playing with the cue ball that came with my ball set, I had burn marks all over the place. After switching to a good qualtiy Aramith cue ball the burn marks stopped.
 
reverend said:
I would say the cloth in question plays most like Championship 3030. I know it acts about the same when installing, and playing is quite similar. I install more tables then I play pool, so from an installers it is like the Chapmionship.
Centennial is 3030 with teflon added. Championship makes it for Brunswick.
 
Back
Top