Does TOI help in preventing CIT misses ?

Straight question.
I'm a T.O.I. practitioner, but now, and even before I started with the method, I've never given a moment's thought to CIT. I'm aware that it exists because I've read about it, but I don't think about it or consciously compensate for it in any way, shape, or form.
 
It depends heavily on the cut angle and the amount of inside spin.

For fuller cuts - up to, say, half ball - a little inside spin will increase throw, but more spin can reduce it. For cuts thinner than half ball, inside spin will always reduce throw.

But I'm not sure that reducing throw is necessarily an improvement - it's part of most shots, so it's built into our perception of how to aim. Maybe the best way to cope with it is to not try to "fix" it.

pj
chgo
 
Firm hitting can produce deflection of the CB away from the aim line with TOI that can compensate or reduce the under cut produced by CIT.

A CTE shot is usually less than the popular 30 degrees attributed to it. TOI might get one closer to that 30 degrees.

Be well
 
How does TOI work with a flat faced tip on the end of the shaft?

It works the same as a flat tip does putting any other type of English on the cue ball. You have to figure out how far outside or inside your tip will allow you to hit and then adjust accordingly.
 
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