Closed bridge without a glove

nodejo

Registered
Ive been playing with a glove for a while, but now started to practice without a glove because Im going to go on a vacation for a month and we always play a bunch of pool on vacations.
I dont want to be the douche who brings his glove to a bar.

The problem is its almost impossible for me to shoot with a closed bridge now.
The friction is so heavy that I have to make the loop way to big and then still it doesnt slide smoothly.

Ive tried using some lotion on my hand (i have a very dry skin). And clean the cue with a wet towel.
It helped a little bit.
Does anyone have the same problem?
And any tips to resolve this?
 
Ive been playing with a glove for a while, but now started to practice without a glove because Im going to go on a vacation for a month and we always play a bunch of pool on vacations.
I dont want to be the douche who brings his glove to a bar.

The problem is its almost impossible for me to shoot with a closed bridge now.
The friction is so heavy that I have to make the loop way to big and then still it doesnt slide smoothly.

Ive tried using some lotion on my hand (i have a very dry skin). And clean the cue with a wet towel.
It helped a little bit.
Does anyone have the same problem?
And any tips to resolve this?


Maybe powder...could help.
 
Talc. Just a bit. Drop a small nickel sized pile on the counter top, dip your finger in it like you are taking a finger print, then wipe your finger along the shaft.
 
Talc. Just a bit. Drop a small nickel sized pile on the counter top, dip your finger in it like you are taking a finger print, then wipe your finger along the shaft.

Good point, but I recommend using corn starch instead. Corn starch has a lot more viscosity than talc, and can absorb a heck of a lot more moisture than talc. This is why athletes use corn starch and not talc.

A little dab goes a long, l-o-n-g way! Also, it doesn't rub off as easy as talc does.

Cornstarch.jpg


No mess. Try it!

-Sean
 
You mentioned that you have dry hands.... Thats a very good thing. Quit using lotion, and if the shaft of your cue is polished and shiny take some 2000 grit and go over it slowly in one direction only ( joint to ferrule) to knock the shine down a little.
Adding moisture is the bulk of your problem. Thats why people use powder... To eliminate it.
Chuck
 
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