I'm trying to describe it, to someone who dosen't play very much and I was looking for some shots at different angles and thought somebody might have a good description on what to look for.
And I realize that if it's not a 1/4 or 3/4 that it's a 1/2 lol.
Yes, you can demonstrate it pretty easily with some frozen balls and maybe a nine ball rack.
If you have two object balls frozen and the cue ball is shot along their tangent to hit right between them and hit them equally, like this:
![CropperCapture[2].png CropperCapture[2].png](https://forums.azbilliards.com/data/attachments/154/154980-c309bd7851255b7d4889da55985c7a45.jpg?hash=wwm9eFElW3)
then the Q ball hits each of the A and B balls half-ball. If you know that an equilateral triangle has three angles equal to 60 degree each, it's obvious that the cut angle is 30 degrees (neglecting throw). To see a little easier the line involved, you can rack for nine ball like this:
![CropperCapture[3].png CropperCapture[3].png](https://forums.azbilliards.com/data/attachments/154/154979-db7c8b62c49870c3ea8e4f964a510f2c.jpg?hash=23yLYsSYcM)
and then remove the unlabeled balls. The path X-Q is the path of the incoming cue ball, so you could line that up with the cue ball of a shot you want to check for "halfballness".
A standard shot that can be played as a half-ball shot is the spot shot which these days is only played at 14.1 and one pocket:
![CropperCapture[4].png CropperCapture[4].png](https://forums.azbilliards.com/data/attachments/154/154981-6e480db9dfeb1d01a063770b7aaa6377.jpg?hash=bkgNud_rHQ)
If your stick is over the corner pocket when you shoot this shot, it is a half-ball shot.
Many of the important features of the half-ball shot were covered in a recent thread:
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=254719
(I see that Mark types faster than I draw.

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