I played with what seemed to a heavier cb tonight, and am wondering if the good draw action I was getting could have been because of this?
You probably just adjusted your aim/stroke to compensate.I played with what seemed to a heavier cb tonight, and am wondering if the good draw action I was getting could have been because of this?
No.I played with what seemed to a heavier cb tonight, and am wondering if the good draw action I was getting could have been because of this?
I played with what seemed to a heavier cb tonight, and am wondering if the good draw action I was getting could have been because of this?
You must mean the opposite?The biggest difference I have noticed when drawing heavy and light cue balls is that it seems the light ball will hesitate in place just spinning before rolling backwards and the heavy ball seems to draw immediately after object ball contact. I suppose it could be due to cloth also but it always seems consistent with the heavy ball.
If you learn to hit all shots with the same stroke, controlling the distance of draw becomes less of a problem. Problem I have is super draw shots where my stroke accuracy goes out the window. Have yet to do one.Drawing Cueball is skill that improves with practice, and draw is 100% harder to control then follow.
Brings up a good question. Old bar box oversize/weight cueballs were difficult to draw. (I eventually learned after much cussing and many quarters.) Was the problem due to weight or circumference?
If you learn to hit all shots with the same stroke, controlling the distance of draw becomes less of a problem. Problem I have is super draw shots where my stroke accuracy goes out the window. Have yet to do one.
This is exactly what often happens drawing the cue ball when playing Snooker ( smaller cue ball) vs American Pool.The biggest difference I have noticed when drawing heavy and light cue balls is that it seems the light ball will hesitate in place just spinning before rolling backwards and the heavy ball seems to draw immediately after object ball contact. I suppose it could be due to cloth also but it always seems consistent with the heavy ball.
Other way around.The biggest difference I have noticed when drawing heavy and light cue balls is that it seems the light ball will hesitate in place just spinning before rolling backwards and the heavy ball seems to draw immediately after object ball contact. I suppose it could be due to cloth also but it always seems consistent with the heavy ball.
Other way around.
The lighter cueball both bounces back AND spins back. Heavier ball sits and does sort of a mini 'burnout' then backs up. The old 'big ball' actually goes forward a bit and then comes back. Sorta.Sometimes when you hit hard enough on a lighter/smaller ball for super draw, it could do a mini hop or spin in place for a second before shooting back. Not sure if the latter is a table cloth thing or not.