I hadn't shot pool for nearly 30 years (since I was a teenager), then last year I bought a new house and had enough room for an 8' table. Bought a new 8' Brunswick (Bradford model). Started shooting a couple of hours a week. Got some of the old blood flowing. Liked my table. Started entering tournaments at Hard Times in Sac. Did okay at the first one (finished 3rd), but it was literally the first time I had played on a 9' table in 30 yrs. Lots different than an 8' table. Plus, the pockets at Hard Times are less than 4-1/2 inches wide (two balls side-by-side won't even squeeze into them). The pockets on my table at home were 5 inches wide - buckets! The cloth on my table also rolled slower, and the felt pilled up a lot when I brushed it. Learned later that it was a Mali.
So...to help me practice better, I found someone through a local billards supply store to recover my table and shim the pockets so that they're now 4-1/2 inches wide. I like 'em a lot. The guy talked me out of getting Simonis; told me that Championship cloth played just as fast, was a lot cheaper, and was easier to maintain. Now I think he just didn't want to work with Simonis because it's probably harder to install properly. I do like the new cloth a lot better. The balls roll more smoothly, and I don't need to apply as much English or shoot as hard as I used to. Good stuff. Just what I wanted.
Anyway...my table played perfectly level with the old cloth on it. Now I'm noticing a bit of drift when the cue ball comes to a stop in certain areas of the table. Kind of wobbles and sometimes drifts maybe 1/4" or so. I haven't noticed it affecting the path of any object balls, or even the cue ball enroute to an object ball. I think the new thinner, smoother cloth shows the imperfections. It's not a serious problem, but it just irritates me a little every time I see whitey wobble to a stop.
Anybody got any suggestions as to how I can deal with this without going to the expense of having my table torn down and totally redone? Should I just try lifting it a little and placing shims under the feet? I started to do that but stopped when I heard some creaking. Not sure whether doing so might just make the problem worse. I laid a level on it in several places and at different angles, and the bubble is only the slightest bit off, almost imperceptibly so. If putting shims under the feet is a possible solution, is there some technique I should use when lifting it?
I'd appreciate your help, guys! (I love this forum, by the way.)
So...to help me practice better, I found someone through a local billards supply store to recover my table and shim the pockets so that they're now 4-1/2 inches wide. I like 'em a lot. The guy talked me out of getting Simonis; told me that Championship cloth played just as fast, was a lot cheaper, and was easier to maintain. Now I think he just didn't want to work with Simonis because it's probably harder to install properly. I do like the new cloth a lot better. The balls roll more smoothly, and I don't need to apply as much English or shoot as hard as I used to. Good stuff. Just what I wanted.
Anyway...my table played perfectly level with the old cloth on it. Now I'm noticing a bit of drift when the cue ball comes to a stop in certain areas of the table. Kind of wobbles and sometimes drifts maybe 1/4" or so. I haven't noticed it affecting the path of any object balls, or even the cue ball enroute to an object ball. I think the new thinner, smoother cloth shows the imperfections. It's not a serious problem, but it just irritates me a little every time I see whitey wobble to a stop.
Anybody got any suggestions as to how I can deal with this without going to the expense of having my table torn down and totally redone? Should I just try lifting it a little and placing shims under the feet? I started to do that but stopped when I heard some creaking. Not sure whether doing so might just make the problem worse. I laid a level on it in several places and at different angles, and the bubble is only the slightest bit off, almost imperceptibly so. If putting shims under the feet is a possible solution, is there some technique I should use when lifting it?
I'd appreciate your help, guys! (I love this forum, by the way.)