bluepepper said:Hello Stan. Thanks for subjecting yourself to this microsurgery.
If you could, please take a look at the 2 pages of the cuetable layouts below:
The first page shows 4 object balls positioned so that their outside edges all connect via the same line to the cueball center. It also shows where the ghost ball would be to pocket all shots in the upper left corner pocket. Please excuse the cuetable anomalies. Sometimes when you save a layout, the circles on the lines move slightly.
The second page shows the same solidified system of balls and lines, but tilted slightly counterclockwise. The angles that the object balls release off of the blue center-to-edge line are the same as on page one. In this case, of course, the balls don't go into the upper left corner pocket. So whatever bridge placement and pivot was used to sink the balls on page one, couldn't be used to sink the balls into the same pocket on page two.
You mentioned that adjustments are necessary in the Pro One system. Can you describe the sort of adjustments you would make to pocket all 8 shots?
Thanks for taking the time.
From what I could establish, the cue goes to this position parallel to the CTE line, so that would infer that the bridge pivot is 1 1/8th inch from the CTE line too. But the focus is on the tip placement, not the bridge placement as I understand.Patrick Johnson said:Can either of you explain what "tip offset" means here?
pj
chgo
stan shuffett said:I will give an answer based on the diagram and not from a pooltable with cue in hand.
Outside pivot, outside pivot, inside pivot and another inside pivot possibly with an adjustment.
Then there's PRO ONE......for a righty, left to right most of the time for all the above shots....with an adjustment for the toughest cut.
Good luck.......Stan
stan shuffett said:I will give an answer based on the diagram and not from a pooltable with cue in hand.
Outside pivot, outside pivot, inside pivot and another inside pivot possibly with an adjustment.
Then there's PRO ONE......for a righty, left to right most of the time for all the above shots....with an adjustment for the toughest cut.
Good luck.......Stan
bluepepper said:Thanks Stan for answering. Did you click to see page two? The balls are all in the same position relative to the cueball and one another. The only thing that has changed is the entire setup has shifted slightly counterclockwise on an unshifted table. So the balls won't go in the pocket using the same pivots you mentioned were required to make them on page one.
That is, unless there are adjustments to your pivots to account for the new arrangement.
ShootingArts said:Bluepepper,
This is where so much of the diagramming and math seems to go to hell. You seem to have simply rotated the whole ball and line diagram assembly. What you fail to account for is that center to edge is no longer the same starting point on page two as it was in page one. You have to redo page two placing the balls in the new position and finding the new center to edge line instead of using the same point on the object ball. As I said much earlier in this thread, the diagrams and proofs miss the fact that center to edge is a constantly changing starting point which is in my opinion why many of these systems work far better than I would think they should when I take a superficial look at them. They are largely self correcting. Not entirely, but largely.
Hu
BP,bluepepper said:Hu, I'm a fan of your insightful posts, but I think you're mistaken here. What I'm pointing out in the diagram on page two is that these Houle and possibly Stan center-to-edge methods teach only one or two pivots, while the center-to-edge visual alignment and reference for cue placement remains the same. Page two shows the same center-to-edge line as it showed on page one. If the system says that all shots can be made with only 2 pivots, and hence only 2 bridge positions, how can the shots on page 2 be made in the same pocket as those on page 1?
If I'm misinterpreting your post, an illustration would be very helpful. Thanks
Colin Colenso said:In the Stan thread he mentioned different bridge positions being required for different angles. Colin
stan shuffett said:A CB and OB in the middle of the table (away from each other) can initially result into 4 distinct shots using the system. There's a thick and a thin shot on each side of the objectball. It depends on the pivot. Some of the shots go and some may not. So there are 4 bridge locations for that particular CB/OB relationship. There is one technique that takes you to each bridge location. I have tried to give some useful insights to this approach of aiming. Stan
Stan,stan shuffett said:A CB and OB in the middle of the table (away from each other) can initially result into 4 distinct shots using the system. There's a thick and a thin shot on each side of the objectball. It depends on the pivot. Some of the shots go and some may not. So there are 4 bridge locations for that particular CB/OB relationship. There is one technique that takes you to each bridge location. I have tried to give some useful insights to this approach of aiming. Stan