Interesting. I believe Darren has a Diamond for his personal table.
That makes sense, he probably plays tournament pool mostly on Diamonds. :thumbup:
Interesting. I believe Darren has a Diamond for his personal table.
I like a Gold Crown. Nothing beats the sound of a ball hitting the pocket of a GC. It seems as though Brunswick has purposely ceded the market to Diamond though as Brunswick has thrown their marketing money at other sports and pastimes while Diamond is heavily promoting themselves.
The Gold Crown design was crap. Crap from the start and only slightly better now. Of course now the rails suffer from infant mortality. Horrible misfeatures that could only have been put in by a non-player. Like, as one example, drop pockets that only hold 3 balls or you risk rejection. And gummy pocket liners that interfere with bridging and leave crap on your cue.
People got attached to GCs because it was what they learned on, but it was never a good table design.
Maybe they got better pocket liners. The standard pocket liners for non-return GC3 tables are shallow/small enough that if there are three balls in the pocket, there is a good chance that a hard shot will reject the ball. I've also seen a ball rejected when only one ball was already in the pocket as it sits centered in the drain hole and can push back on the new ball hard enough to send it back onto the table.
A story about the latter... Around 1979 I was playing Tony Annigoni (of Playing Off the Rail fame and noted tournament promoter) on a GC (probably 2?). Whenever he had a fast shot into a pocket, he would make sure there were exactly two balls in the pocket. I thought it was craziness at the time, but it was a smart move learned from hard experience.
Other misfeatures of the GCs:
Metal parts on the rails to leave oxide streaks on your pants.
Prominent name plate and score wheels to take flesh off your knuckles in case you try to keep your cue level at the wrong time.
No slate pins (GC3)
Lousy ball storage that allows balls from my side (1 pocket) to move through to my opponent's side (ball return table).
Pocket liners and metal surrounds that screw with your bridge
Diamonds you can't see when you are down on the shot due to the curved rails. I think the curved rails were a "feature" to roll cigarettes onto the floor away from the cloth.
Lousy rack hanger. (A local room has added their own.)
The Diamond design appears to have taken all of these crappy points into consideration and fixed them.
Metal parts on the rails to leave oxide streaks on your pants.
Prominent name plate and score wheels to take flesh off your knuckles in case you try to keep your cue level at the wrong time.
While honestly Bob I do love GC's and they always have been my table of choice, I too have absolutely HATED those counters since day one.
What is the price for new 9 ft GC vs new Diamond 9ft.
The Gold Crown design was crap. Crap from the start and only slightly better now. Of course now the rails suffer from infant mortality. Horrible misfeatures that could only have been put in by a non-player. Like, as one example, drop pockets that only hold 3 balls or you risk rejection. And gummy pocket liners that interfere with bridging and leave crap on your cue.
People got attached to GCs because it was what they learned on, but it was never a good table design.
10k for the GC vs about 6-7k IIRC for the Diamond, suggested retail of course.
List prices are on the Brunswick website. It is slightly higher if you want tournament-edition pockets and a cloth upgrade.$10K for a GC?? WOW
I'm not old enoughBut, how do you really feel?
What is your opinion of the previous generation, Anniversary, Centennial, etc?
Dale(who thinks it's been all downhill since they stopped using #3 pockets)
10k for the GC vs about 6-7k IIRC for the Diamond, suggested retail of course.
Diamonds, if I'm not mistaken, have a lip in the slate right in front of the pocket so a very slow pocket speed roll will hang. How do I know? It cost me a bunch of money on a 5 ball on a 9 ball break and run raffle. Any truth to this and if so why?
Diamonds, if I'm not mistaken, have a lip in the slate right in front of the pocket so a very slow pocket speed roll will hang. How do I know? It cost me a bunch of money on a 5 ball on a 9 ball break and run raffle. Any truth to this and if so why?
I think that the way slate is ground, it would be pretty hard to leave a lip. I'd suspect the cloth installation or maintenance.Diamonds, if I'm not mistaken, have a lip in the slate right in front of the pocket so a very slow pocket speed roll will hang. How do I know? It cost me a bunch of money on a 5 ball on a 9 ball break and run raffle. Any truth to this and if so why?
The slate ( shelf ) is cut deeper on a Diamond. which will prevent a lot of balls from falling in making it a more challenging table.
Diamonds, if I'm not mistaken, have a lip in the slate right in front of the pocket so a very slow pocket speed roll will hang. How do I know? It cost me a bunch of money on a 5 ball on a 9 ball break and run raffle. Any truth to this and if so why?
The Gold Crown design was crap. Crap from the start and only slightly better now. Of course now the rails suffer from infant mortality. Horrible misfeatures that could only have been put in by a non-player. Like, as one example, drop pockets that only hold 3 balls or you risk rejection. And gummy pocket liners that interfere with bridging and leave crap on your cue.
People got attached to GCs because it was what they learned on, but it was never a good table design.