Seriously? You’ve transitioned through :
Softer tips create more spin
to
Tip hardness makes a difference somehow since Dave said to be more delicate with a hard tip vs soft speeds.
to
There is a difference in tip efficiency.
Am I really an engineer? Let’s add you to that other guy who didn’t understand the basic ideal gas law that questioned if I was a mechanical engineer (who actually focused on thermodynamics). He lost on that one as well, and to his credit gave a video of his apology.
I clearly understand mechanical physics. You’ve already insulted two other guys whose careers based on the study physics have been very successful. I guess you insulting me as you did them should make me feel privileged.
Alright Fred, I'll try to be more explicit since you (and others) don't appear to see the common thread connecting what you consider to be disjoint thoughts aimed at what they call "moving the goalposts" these days.
What is in dispute is "Myth 3" in Doctor Dave's video: "Tip Hardness Effects."
At 3:06, Dr. Dave says: "Some people think that because a soft tip stays in contact longer with the cueball, it can impart more or less spin than a harder tip. But this is not true. For an explanation why see the
tip hardness effects resource page linked in the video description."
This claim is made after showing that the measured contact times for a phenolic and a soft-leather tip are 0.8ms and 1.9ms, respectively. A difference of a factor of 2.
Ok. So, double the contact time, and the "imparted spin" in the words of Dr. Dave, are effectively the same. Contact time has no effect.
What does it mean for a thing to have no effect. Let's consider a simple example:
Whether I wear socks to bed has no effect on whether the sun rises tomorrow morning. Therefore, if I wear socks to bed, or I don't, the sun will rise. I won't have to pull one sock off my foot or add an extra sock to the other foot to compensate anything. The sun will rise no matter what.
Now let us return to the question of tip hardness and imparted spin. Dr. Dave said earlier in this thread that to get the same imparted spin with a hard tip, a more delicate stroke is required. Therefore, the hardness of the tip is not independent of the imparted spin.
This is already a lot to digest, Engineer Fred. We can return to the so-called tip-efficiency later, when we sort out this first piece.