Drop pocket vs. gully... what is your preference and why?

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Always cracked me up playing on these perfect rolling laboratory grade tables and the balls would jump the return rails and fall to the floor or get stuck on the side panels - sometimes in hidden spots you had to get under the table and hunt for the ball.
 
A table with nice double leather pockets doesn't give a little clank. It sounds more like a boxer working out on the old heavy bag, a nice deep thunk.
The antique Schmidt tables I learned on, had deep, leather net pockets. Hardly ever had to empty one before the 9-ball ring game was over, and the pocketing sound was kind of a …‘kassshinnk’.
 
The antique Schmidt tables I learned on, had deep, leather net pockets. Hardly ever had to empty one before the 9-ball ring game was over, and the pocketing sound was kind of a …‘kassshinnk’.

I think my favorite tables were EA Schmidt or Schmidt and somebody. Reaching after fifty years and I might be completely wrong. They had the standard cut leather pockets but the cut diamonds didn't start until a few inches down and there was a "burner" that was the first thing hit, heavy saddle leather protecting the pocket itself. Some old five by tens in a basement near LSU-BR. I liked the sound so much I sometimes played shape just to be able to drive balls cleanly into centerpocket of the corners.

A long dark high ceilinged room that smelled heavily of leather and wood. It wasn't like walking into a church but it had it's own unique feel and smell like a church. They uncovered a table for you and the rack "boy" who would never see seventy again racked the balls, a dime a rack. If I was flush I was a big tipper and would give him a quarter a rack. If things were tight, fifteen cents.

There was a similar place on Chimes near Highland Road but the one I am thinking of was the basement of a frat house if I am not mistaken. You were supposed to have a member of the frat with you to play but after I was a regular I eased in a few times without one.

That place, the old five by tens, the quiet, the rich but not offensive smell, this has always been what a pool hall should be in my mind.

Hu
 
I'm getting ready to pull the trigger on a 9' Gold Crown VI (non-tournament).

I grew up playing on a 9' Brunswick VIP with a gully system. Most of my league play in Chicago has been 8' or 9' tables with drop pockets. I always preferred the gully system - though to be honest I can't really say I have a strong reason for it other than convenience and the fact that every now and then you have a drop pocket game where you have too many balls in one pocket and have to shift some.

So what do people think? Is there any reason for preferring one over the other?
I bought a diamond pro am (ball return) and I so wish I would have bought the diamond professional (drop pocket) instead for my home table. If you play a lot of straight pool or one pocket then it may be worth it for ball return. The major benefit of drop pocket is your balls will stay prestine for much longer and your cloth will stay cleaner.
 
I bought a diamond pro am (ball return) and I so wish I would have bought the diamond professional (drop pocket) instead for my home table. If you play a lot of straight pool or one pocket then it may be worth it for ball return. The major benefit of drop pocket is your balls will stay prestine for much longer and your cloth will stay cleaner.
why?
 
You get micro abrasions from the balls running down the tracks. Chalk and other substrates gets in them and it's pretty much impossible to get this particles out. You have to polish the balls a lot with a return system. Home use, drop pocket is the way.
 
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You get micro abrasions from the balls running down the tracks. Chalk and other substrates gets in them and it's pretty much impossible to get this particles out. You have to polish the balls a lot with a return system. Home use, drop pocket is the way.
thanks for the reply
 
You get micro abrasions from the balls running down the tracks. Chalk and other substrates gets in them and it's pretty much impossible to get this particles out. You have to polish the balls a lot with a return system. Home use, drop pocket is the way.
Or, you could just use V10 chalk, thus keeping the balls (and returns) clean, and save on shoe leather.
 
You get micro abrasions from the balls running down the tracks. Chalk and other substrates gets in them and it's pretty much impossible to get this particles out. You have to polish the balls a lot with a return system. Home use, drop pocket is the way.
On a Diamond, maybe but not a Gold Crown.
 
If it's setup properly it will. I've had ball return on my GCI for a few years now (used to be drop pocket) and I've not had a ball get stuck.
You'd think. One in particular - an old one, had those guided pocket drains and everything. If you hit the ball wrong, it would magically jump the tracks. Thinking about it, must've been the pocket liners spinning the ball onto the rubberized tracks.
 
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