So I've been toying with the idea of building a machine that can execute a pool stroke. I've got a little shop, and a table in the basement, and enough spare time over the next few winters to do this project ...
In general the machine would be to satisfy my own anal engineering mind, but I suppose the machine could be used to test various cues to some extent. There is one nagging design issue, and would appreciate any and all comments. Should the motive force stroking action be a pendulum (an idealized human stoke with no movement other than a pivot around an 'elbow'), or a straight slide ? From a construction point of view I have workable designs for both approaches. I believe that instrumenting the straight slide stroke would be easier, but that is not how real people stroke. The pendulum stroke will require slightly more complex instrumentation and set-up procedures, but might be more 'real world'. Whadaya think ?
Also, for those who have seen a pool robot (or whatever you want to call such a beast), how do the balls get positioned on the table to maintain a consistent set-up over many strokes ? I have some ideas, but would love to hear how any others do it. OK, even if you haven't seen one in action, how might it be done ? My concept is to reference the cue ball to a corner using a couple of micrometer-adjust hard stops (at right angles to each other).
Dave
In general the machine would be to satisfy my own anal engineering mind, but I suppose the machine could be used to test various cues to some extent. There is one nagging design issue, and would appreciate any and all comments. Should the motive force stroking action be a pendulum (an idealized human stoke with no movement other than a pivot around an 'elbow'), or a straight slide ? From a construction point of view I have workable designs for both approaches. I believe that instrumenting the straight slide stroke would be easier, but that is not how real people stroke. The pendulum stroke will require slightly more complex instrumentation and set-up procedures, but might be more 'real world'. Whadaya think ?
Also, for those who have seen a pool robot (or whatever you want to call such a beast), how do the balls get positioned on the table to maintain a consistent set-up over many strokes ? I have some ideas, but would love to hear how any others do it. OK, even if you haven't seen one in action, how might it be done ? My concept is to reference the cue ball to a corner using a couple of micrometer-adjust hard stops (at right angles to each other).
Dave