DO ANY SNOOKER TABLES HAVE DIAMONDS FOR MARKERS ON THEM?

Our Snooker Table at MaGoos (Tulsa) has diamonds on it's rails. They are made by Avery, they are round & look like little donuts. They were originally made to reinforce the holes in 3 ring binder paper. Us old guys use them for Rail Play.... We play on a 10' Brunswick Royal Snooker Table, that has 6 legs. We play with Pool Balls & the rails have been shimmed for that & THE POCKETS ARE TIGHTER.
 
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Our Snooker Table at MaGoos (Tulsa) has diamonds on it's rails. They are made by Avery, they are round & look like little donuts. They were originally made to reinforce the holes in 3 ring binder paper. Us old guys use them for Rail Play.... We play on a 10 Brunswick Royal, that has 6 legs. We play with Pool balls & the rails have been shimmed for that & THE POCKETS ARE TIGHTER.
at what point does snooker not become snooker anymore lol
Sounds interesting to play on though
 
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Our Snooker Table at MaGoos (Tulsa) has diamonds on it's rails. They are made by Avery, they are round & look like little donuts. They were originally made to reinforce the holes in 3 ring binder paper. Us old guys use them for Rail Play.... We play on a 10' Brunswick Royal Snooker Table, that has 6 legs. We play with Pool Balls & the rails have been shimmed for that & THE POCKETS ARE TIGHTER.
at what point does snooker not become snooker anymore lol
Sounds interesting to play on though
seems to me they are just playing pool on a 10 foot table
the pockets are not snooker pockets from what i gather from the post
it seems its a snooker table that identifies as a pool table....😂😂😂

(i couldnt resist ...sorry)
 
seems to me they are just playing pool on a 10 foot table
the pockets are not snooker pockets from what i gather from the post
it seems its a snooker table that identifies as a pool table....😂😂😂

(i couldnt resist ...sorry)
It is a game called GOLF... it is not Golf POOL.... The pockets on the Snooker Table are Snooker Pockets that have been modified, to be tighter. Anyone is welcome to play. Some games last 3 hours or more, some games have lasted longer than 4 hours. At $5 & $1, you can lose $35, at $10 & $1 you can lose more than $50.... anyone is welcome to play. When company comes, we even play $20 & $2, or more,,, Loser pays Sell-Out, it's twice what the game is played for... if a Run out happens, everyone pays double.
 
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@ceebee
if you have changed the pocket facings from rounded like a snooker table
to me its not a snooker table anymore
golf i have heard is a great game and was/is played often on a snooker table
if you are having fun
GREAT....(y)
 
I think he was just making a suggestion that using the little paper ring was a neat and harmless way to add diamonds to a table that is without them.


I was thinking similar , I had someome making marks on my snooker cloth by drawing with the chalk to practice and do repeat shots. No harm done , no damage it just seemed "wrong" somehow.

I think a more "polite" way is just to use a bit of a postit note so I've been meaning to cut down a little pad of them to about 1/4" square with the sticky bit on the back, just for using as ball markers. similar situation, some chalk board chalk can work too. shows up better than blue on green.

If he's enjoying the game who should mind that there have been table modifications. I feel that , this is only really important if you are playing at a more official level. It could create a home advantage to someone used to that particular table.. serious players may not like it because it throws them off their preferred game a little and they aim to practice on similar tables to get better. This is really important to some, not everyone.
Outside of that even the most warped or modified table is still a fair game. you could lift one end half an inch or make the pockets bigger smaller or a different profile or even each a different size and still have fair games. You can play snooker on an 8 ball table or the reverse, it's still fun. many have more than one set of balls just for this reason, This is not at all uncommon. I suggest you do what makes you smile the most !
 
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I suggest you do what makes you smile the most !
i have this in a very prominent place in my house so i see it thruought the day
words to live by in my humble opinion
happy.jpg
 
@ceebee
if you have changed the pocket facings from rounded like a snooker table
to me its not a snooker table anymore
golf i have heard is a great game and was/is played often on a snooker table
if you are having fun
GREAT....(y)
The facings are ROUNDER, the whole idea is to make the game hard to score or run out. We do have fun, but tempers will flare from time to time & everyone is your competitor & judge.... , i.e., what did you do that for, why did you leave the cue ball there, I'm tired of you hooking me....

Note, the ball's won't run down the rail into the pocket...
 

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The facings are ROUNDER, the whole idea is to make the game hard to score or run out. We do have fun, but tempers will flare from time to time & everyone is your competitor & judge.... , i.e., what did you do that for, why did you leave the cue ball there, I'm tired of you hooking me....

Note, the ball's won't run down the rail into the pocket...
This gets a 👍
And 😱
😃
 
I picked up an old brunswick 7 foot and admired it, its eames era and cool looking. It has a style and build quality that sets it apart from all those 8 foot sears type garbage tables.

It had snooker cloth and pockets more similar to 8 ball as original , also came with both types of balls. It was expensive int it's day unlike the cheapo tables but it isn;t slate either. that means it's a "portable" table.

the rubber was really small and had poor bounce, its from about 1964 so the rubber was 60 years old.
I cut the rails back 10 mm and used 3/4" thick triangular rubber, covered it in snooker cloth. I made the pockets tighter as I intended it for adults, not kids. It worked out so well ! the ball size is only 1 7/8" a bit smaller than "normal".

The original particleboard was a bit bumpy so I added a sheet of MDF which is actually dead flat. pockets were all rotten I basically rebuilt the pockets with rubber sheets and some plastic trim , it took a bit of fooling around but I got it working real nice and looking quite presentable.

I made some 3/4 x 3/4 trim for the edges with a fancy profile to hide the edges of the added sheet of MDF. that blended in with the rails ok. I did a dark stain on the maple strips. I gave the MDF a light coat of laquer to seal it in a bit.

It was a ton of fun to play on and we gained a lot of practice, I saw improvements in our aim and learned lots in general. I replaced it with a 9 foot Brunswick Balke Collander approximately 120 years old. Love the thing !

this one has snooker style pockets but I believe it's made for 2 1/4 ball size. huge for snooker ! maybe it was designed for straight pool or a pocket carom game or maybe american snooker?
I went looking for 2 1/2 snooker balls and found them with ease, they do not seem rare, but who uses 2 1/2 for snooker?

we tend to use the 2 1/16 more on the 12' but can practice on the bigger balls too. My rails seem ok on both, no jumping balls. I copared it to the 6x 12 and my rails are about 1/8" taller, similar profile. larger pocket openings. I don't see modifying that.
I decided this table is an antique and shouldnt be modified out of respect for it's vintage, although smaller pockets might feel more normal. Its just what it always was and was meant to be.

that larger size helps us shoot 9 ball and 8 ball etc. the larger balls take spins a bit differently. On the weekends we like to go play ,mainly on a 12 foot snooker table with 2 1/16 balls..but some 21/2 " on 9 ball etc on a GC as well. withthhis i can play snooker with either size and it's fun and that way I get practice on both. at first I thought that would throw me and cause confusion but i dont find that's the case in practice, any practice is good. Now when I do try to play 9 ball the larger size may help on that as well. I can also play 9 ball with the rounded pockets, why not? the size is comparable to a GC used for 9 ball.

Of course I can't fit one of those 12 foot snooker tables in my living room so this BBC is working great for us. The BBC table has rounded pockets which suggest snooker but the rails are a bit higher, pockets are a little wider than the english sylle snooker table. Maybe it increases confidence a little. I'm making some longer runs now due to the larger size of pockets.

I'm not finding it the case ( for me) that using all these different ball sizes or changing the rail profiles really diminishes any practice I get. I think if you are serious enough about one certain game you may want the consistency, I'm only interested in my own improvements and having fun .
As I see my accuracy improve I'm thankful to have the option to play at home and get 2-3 hours in without spending or going anywhere. I think this added practice far offsets any poor results Im seeing by changing the conditions up.

doing a good backspin with the big balls is easy, with tiny balls, its harder. they have a lot less inertia. some can backspin a ball quite accurately clear across the table, I'm learning.. For me its still a bit inconsistent, as an example, half the time It'll just be a stopshot. sometimes I get my follow-through right or get low enough, or what ever it is stopping me from suceeding. and I do it right.. Sometimes Ill just get my cue right under the ball and see it hop and laugh at me ;-)

at home when I'm not playing serious players I can muck about and try things like this and fool around a bit more, maybe skip the easy shots and take a harder one that challenges me more, or practice those shots I find difficult.
That's a very poor strategy when winning feels important, but sometimes thats how I learn to be able to increase my own confidence and accuracy.

It's nice to do stuff like that at home where there is absolutely no pressure or care about winning the game.

I find straight practice alone bores me quickly, I know I should do more of that but I think, for me, having any other player , despite their skill level being different, to rearrange the balls at least, helps me.

i try playing snooker and hooking myself and imagine the good guy on one shoulder and the bad guy on the other in a competition , but it doesn't take long to forget who's turn it is then ;-) I guess I can play straight pool and see how high of a number I can get to before a miss.

I find any "real game" more interesting and then it capures my attention better. Some love to practice on their own, I guess games like "solitare" might help make it more of a game than just a random ball bashing episode which I get bored with after about 10 mins.
Do you have a fun way to practice alone ? I'm surely not the ony one that gets bored with playing solo.

I think I do benefit by making the same shot over and over, I can see why this helps. Then I can adjust and make it again with minor changes, as many times as I like until I'm confident with that shot,, the one I found I was missing too often.

I can see my practice producing good results, I just get bored with this technique really fast. If I start to not really care its time for a break.

I don't think I learn much, very fast, if I'm in the mindset that I don't really care about the shot.
What I've been doing is looking to my next ball, weighing up options verbally.
Pointing to my preferred cue ball landing place, then seeing how close I actually come with my cue ball to my imagined "destination". playing some games "openly" in this way I do find helpful.

I'm not really thinking to the setup of the third ball but with practice that will come. I can see how good players are able to predict a bit further ahead, when you are "green" it's too mind boggling and unpredicatble to consider what happens very far into the future. I don't think I can predict as far as some really good players can, but it all comes with time I guess.

One thing that I found did not come very naturally was to recognize the instant I knew I missed my angle was WHY?

For some reason my mind jumps away to a focus of disappointment rather than self criticism. Then I don't recognise the reason for my failure. I think if I can learn to recognise what went wrong straight away, then it will help me recognise and hence, adjust.
 
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