We knew that. Just seeing if you did.
pj
chgo
You knew and you know nothing. Manual pivoting is a technique that is used to create "center sidespin" on the cue ball. IT IS NOT USED TO "HELP" YOU FIND THE CONTACT POINT OR GHOST BALL. By initially placing your cue tip on specific points on the cue ball, you pivot to the perceived ccb and with proper stroke technique you spin the cue ball (very slightly). By doing that (if you know what you are doing, which of course you don't....) you play every shot dealing with "SIT".
With this technique you have to learn how the pivots change as cb-ob distance increases. The angles are played different every 2 diamonds of cb-ob distance. So, the player who knows what he is doing (not you of course....) automatically knows when a shot is "0-2", or "2-4", or "4-6", or "6-8".
By adjusting your feet position (stance) you can play the 3 different basic stroke speeds (low, medium, high). This is critical because with different stroke speed you change the rotational speed of the cue ball, which creates a different contact with the object ball and changes the angle. With this system, playing the correct visual alignment at low speed (without knowing how to adjust your stance) will result in an "overcut" and no "undercut" as someone might think.
Spin shots are played the same way with only a visual alignment adjustment. The shaft (ld or not) has nothing to do with accuracy because you play the cb-ob distance.
As I have said before, YOU have zero knowledge of what I am talking about. But your extremely low IQ (others in this forum are as ignorant as you) guides you to laugh at me and my posts.
Your ignorance is your problem. And it is the main problem for lots of guys here.