I'm buying a house soon, and I'd like to get an idea for how much room around the pool table I need to comfortably play. I would prefer a standard 9 foot table, but if need be I can do a bar table. Any help would be great, thanks!
I'm buying a house soon, and I'd like to get an idea for how much room around the pool table I need to comfortably play. I would prefer a standard 9 foot table, but if need be I can do a bar table. Any help would be great, thanks!
I think big enough so the cues don't hit the wall is the generally accepted consensus after these threads run their course.
Add a foot to each dimension in this chart....all the charts are done by guys selling tables who don't understand the concept of a backstroke. Add an extra 2-3 feet beyond that to any side where you want to seat people./QUOTE]
Add a foot to each dimension in the chart..
I think the guys selling tables do understand the concept of a backstroke...
But they don't want to lose a sale if your room size is a smaller dimension.
.
that is sooo! cool! LMGTFY how did you do it?
Add 10 feet to the table size, you need 5 ft all the way around the table from the rubber rail edge on the playing surface to the wall (min). 5 ft from the outer edge of the table is better though.
Mark
I don't want to dismiss nor dismiss this device, because it's not terrible and it's old mostly sage advice. So, not that your post isn't going to help, but to me it's one of the more … loose pieces of advice to a very important question. And I think we as a forum community owe a little more tightening up considering how loose the billiard retail outlets are when they give their awful room dimension advice.
Let's tighten it up:
Because adding 5' to all way around the table from rubber rail edge is not the same thing as adding 10' to the table size, once you do the actual numbers, you'll be scratching your head wondering why it isn't.
If the advise is that you only go 5' from the rubber edge, that's not bad, but that normally would leave you a very short stroke if any if you consider a standard 58" cue plus tip plus bumper. So, you might want to add 4" to the advice.
I understand you would only have 2 inches of back stroke on a ball that was against the rail and shooting straight across the table, that rarley happens and when it does you are not doing a full stroke anyway.
If the advice is that you simply add 10' to the table size -> 9' table goes to 19' x 14.5' , then you will be left wondering why you don't have as much room on the width compared to the length. It's a "table really isn't twice as long as the width" idea.
In the end, I like saying that a 9' table with 50" x 100" playing surface should have at least a 19' x 14' 10" room to have equal minimum comfortable stroking around the table. However, as die hards, a bigger room would be better to add stuff like chairs. Guys with long stretch out stances would probably need the roomier space.
Respectfully,
Freddie <~~~ or add 6" your stick measurements + playing surface
I've the same problem... but I already bought the house and the room I have is a 15' x 15' 9'' but it has a wide open in a corner so I wonder if I have any option. I've attached a little diagram of the room.
I play on 9' tables in my league, and have two 9' tables at work so my speed is used to 9' tables.
I wonder if I'm just f* up and I have to admit that my table is going to be a 8' table instead -at best, or if that open space in the corner give me some room to place the table in a weird yet functional position.
In the future, I'm planning to get ride of that door (main entrance to the room) and enlarge the opening you see right beside it (I'm going to change it for a column in the middle leaving an small "foyer" there.
So... it's just a dream for me having a 9' pool table in that space?
I'm buying a house soon, and I'd like to get an idea for how much room around the pool table I need to comfortably play. I would prefer a standard 9 foot table, but if need be I can do a bar table. Any help would be great, thanks!
Let me google that for you ---> LMGTFY
Congrats on the upcoming purchase Chris! I would say 15' x 20' minimum. I've got my 9' table in an 18' x 18' garage and a short cue is needed with the cue ball frozen on the short rail(s) shooting up/down table.
I've the same problem... but I already bought the house and the room I have is a 15' x 15' 9'' but it has a wide open in a corner so I wonder if I have any option. I've attached a little diagram of the room.
I play on 9' tables in my league, and have two 9' tables at work so my speed is used to 9' tables.
I wonder if I'm just f* up and I have to admit that my table is going to be a 8' table instead -at best, or if that open space in the corner give me some room to place the table in a weird yet functional position.
In the future, I'm planning to get ride of that door (main entrance to the room) and enlarge the opening you see right beside it (I'm going to change it for a column in the middle leaving an small "foyer" there.
So... it's just a dream for me having a 9' pool table in that space?
Add 10 feet to the table size. That gives you. Room for a 60 inch cue all the way around.
9 ft table needs 19 feet by 14.5 feet room.
Etc....
If you have more space better but I would look at that as a min.
Otherwise you need shorty cues and that is not what anyone wants.