Ok, understood & agreed. But to OP’s question, why is it often stated that 760 (supposedly the faster cloth) is more suited to 14.1 vs rotation? I’ve also been curious about this same thing. I’m a novice at 14.1 and not sure If I’ve ever played on 760 or not, so like the OP - just wondering. ThxHow much experience do you have on slow tables? Playing in high humidity? I am not aware of any game or situation in which slow cloth would be favored. It simply takes so much energy to move a ball that the ability to address other aspects is severely hindered -- the necessity of overpowering the cue inhibits the ability to make finer touches.
How do you define slow? It's typically much easier to keep the cue ball from running around the table with slow cloth. In rotation games where you may need to go from one end of the table to the other and stay down there, slow cloth makes that easier. I can be very difficult to hold the cue ball on fast cloth on longer shots. If the cloth is too slow, following a shot out of the corner and back down the table is difficult as are long draw shots. In a game like one pocket, you may need to bank off the far end of the table but want to hit the cue ball softly. There's a range of preferable speeds, varying with your skill level and style, and the game you are playing is also a factor.I am not aware of any game or situation in which slow cloth would be favored.
Most definitely. Maybe the humidity in Biloxi slows things down but I've played tables where the balls keep rolling, and rolling, and rolling. If the table rolls off, it's like this:Is there such a thing as cloth that is too fast?
At some point, it becomes easy to overrun position.Why is fast cloth favored more in some games rather than others? For instance, I've read about 760 being recommended for one pocket.
Entirely too fast for playing pool.I like the effortless speed of billiard cloth. You can play naturals that don't even work on pool cloth. Big fatal exception but, the table has to be dead level. Even the slightest lean can screw you up totally.
Even the slowest worsted cloth is fast compared to the old woolens.Fast clothe I think is preferred cause it's easier. Every shot I shoot nowadays requires nothing above a medium speed stroke, usually a slow stroke which makes me more accurate. Old slow clothe days most shots took a medium and sometimes break speed to get where you needed to be. I'm definitely less accurate pounding a ball
When old time pool players are talking about “slow” cloth we aren’t talking about 860 vs 760.How do you define slow? It's typically much easier to keep the cue ball from running around the table with slow cloth. In rotation games where you may need to go from one end of the table to the other and stay down there, slow cloth makes that easier. I can be very difficult to hold the cue ball on fast cloth on longer shots. If the cloth is too slow, following a shot out of the corner and back down the table is difficult as are long draw shots. In a game like one pocket, you may need to bank off the far end of the table but want to hit the cue ball softly. There's a range of preferable speeds, varying with your skill level and style, and the game you are playing is also a factor.
You're right about the slower cloth, but there was lot of manufacturers producing the woven woolen cloth in those days, but Stevens 22oz Superweave and Brunco1 were not in that category of slow, thick, shedding cloths.When old time pool players are talking about “slow” cloth we aren’t talking about 860 vs 760.
Unless I missed it, and that’s possible. “Slow” cloth is Stevens, Mali etc. the old fuzzy cloth that would get pills under the cushions when it was new, fuzz balls. That was “slow” cloth.
On slow cloth there are many shots where you just can’t move the cue ball like you can on any simonis cloth. The slicker the cloth the easier it is to move the CB. You can create angles that don’t exist on slow cloth or roll long enough to “get there” which is impossible on “slow” cloth.
So what’s that all mean? With more angles and length available it makes pitting the CB in places you just can’t (or need one hell of a stroke-think Earl) get to under normal circumstances. So with the ease of getting there “fast” tables play easier.
Take a player who’s played 4 years on simonis only and put him on a “slow” table and you’ll see someone struggle and if it’s wet they will play at least 2 gears down from their normal speed at best. Maybe worse.
That’s the difference between fast and slow cloth. I haven’t seen slow cloth in years. It’s all fast these days
Fatboy
If its so good why is no one except you using it? Not trying to be cute just asking a legit question. Its not even on Strachan's site. Did they re-name it?You
You're right about the slower cloth, but there was lot of manufacturers producing the woven woolen cloth in those days, but Stevens 22oz Superweave and Brunco1 were not in that category of slow, thick, shedding cloths.
I just installed 4 7ft Diamond's in the Ranch Tavern in Yakima, WA.
When all the league players that showed up to play on the tables for league that night saw there wasn't any Simonis cloth on the tables, without hitting a ball on the tables yet, several of them come up to me and asked me why I didn't install Simonis cloth on the tables, because no one wants to play on slow cloth. I just laughed and told everyone, you will all have to learn to shoot pool all over again
After all 4 were set up and ready to play, everyone jumped on the tables, I just sat back and watched!!
I heard "what the hell' and "holly shit, did you see that" and 'wow, did you see that draw back"
When I left, no one was complaining about the "SLOW" cloth anymore, and no one was calling it 'FAST" either, but everyone was asking what was the new cloth if not Simonis? I just told everyone it's a new Simonis cloth product
Nick Lopez, the Yakima table mechanic that helped me install the Diamonds, also helped me install the 4 Diamonds in the Dutch Bar & Grill in Yakima as well, asked me if I could get him the same Strachan Superweave but in Tour Blue instead of Green, because he wanted to put the same cloth on those tables as well, because even he had never seen a cloth play or react like this cloth was playing.
So, the morel of this story is, there's a lot of brain washing going on when it comes to installing cloth, that's called good MARKETING!!!
It's so new, almost no one knows about it. I know about it because I've been the biggest push to have it developed with Simonis, through the Strachan Snooker cloth mill, as they make the woven woolen cloth, whereas Simonis only produces the worsted woolen cloths.If its so good why is no one except you using it? Not trying to be cute just asking a legit question. Its not even on Strachan's site. Did they re-name it?