If we follow your golf example. Would you suggest a 15 or 20mm shaft for maximum forgiveness?
Well said.
Ray MARTIN
If we follow your golf example. Would you suggest a 15 or 20mm shaft for maximum forgiveness?
Well, you've convinced me to wear my contacts more when I play. I'm actually due for a new prescription and some new contacts, so that's a good reason to switch. I've looked into getting Lasik surgery, but I decided to wait a few years, after I start need reading glasses (I'm near sighted).
Thanks,
Dave
I didn't say eccentric....I said concentric.....
Thanks. That's good advice. Maybe I'll also look into getting some goofy "pool glasses." Does anybody have any suggestions for where to purchase these?I recently got contacts, mainly for shooting pool. They were a huge disappointment. There is some educated guessing that goes into contact lens prescriptions. The ones I had were OK for distance, but lousy for the 3-8' range critical for pool. So, you may find yourself having to tweak an Rx for pool playing lenses, and need another set for things like driving. That was more hassle than I wanted, so I stuck with glasses modified for pool. Talk to your ophthalmologist about what your expectations are prior to getting the lenses.
I think cross stroking is another term for a swoop stroke.
Backhand English (BHE) is an alternative where the cue is pivoted before the final stroke, so the stroke can be straight.
Regards,
Dave
Cross-stroking = stroking across your line of sight, right? So can you get the same effects by leaving your stroke in the same place and moving your head around until you're looking across it?PT109:
why some excellent players cross-stroke...to get more spin and
less deflection.
Thanks. That's good advice. Maybe I'll also look into getting some goofy "pool glasses." Does anybody have any suggestions for where to purchase these?
Thanks,
Dave
Correct pool glasses need two things: a) correct pantoscopic tilt, and b) elevation off the nose. Good luck finding commercial versions that do both.
1. Take an old pair of glasses (90's style oversized lenses work best)
2. Remove temple pieces...
[...]
Cost: Parts, about $2. Labor, about 40 min.
I ordered a pair of special glasses a few years ago by email from Gordon Harrison Opticians and purchased a new pair more recently after the prescription for my regular glasses had changed. I've been very pleased with them. You can find out more at:
http://www.billiard-eyeglasses.com/
where there are testimonials from Grady Mathews and others.
P.S. I would not recommend paying extra for the ultra-thin lenses option.
Are we still talking about cues?If ya need a LD shaft, you are hitting too hard.
Just stroke the ball, not poke it. Caress the CB, love it, be gentle with it, never abuse it.
Proper stroke speed will fix alot.
Cross-stroking = stroking across your line of sight, right? So can you get the same effects by leaving your stroke in the same place and moving your head around until you're looking across it?
This is a serious question - meant to illustrate that a stroke is a stroke and the fact that it doesn't match your line of sight doesn't give it any special abilities.
pj
chgo
LOL. After that intro I'd better not screw this up.pt:Me:Cross-stroking = stroking across your line of sight, right? So can you get the same effects by leaving your stroke in the same place and moving your head around until you're looking across it?
This is a serious question - meant to illustrate that a stroke is a stroke and the fact that it doesn't match your line of sight doesn't give it any special abilities.
A little fear and trembling here.
A tricky subject (for me) and I feel I'm responding to a formidable poster.
I think both of these are true.When I was a kid I pictured removing the rail and drawing with a level
cue.Seems to me that the cue action would want to lift the cue ball.
And if I hit the ball above center with a level cue the cue ball would
be pinched between the tip and the cloth.
I'm guessing you mean a hit with no side effects like lifting or pressing down on the CB. Slanting the cue can accomplish that in one way (the same way angling the cue can compensate for squirt), but it also adds another side effect: hitting up or down on the CB causes missed shots if you happen to hit the CB a little to the side rather than dead center - because the CB curves. This is the "swerve" that always accompanies sidespin shots. But this is off your topic...So I addressed the cue ball dead center and and let the cue slant
downward for draw and up for high english.I feel this action gives
the shot a 'kind' hit.
It's very common to think that angling your cue across your line of sight can produce "extra" sidespin - because it does produce more spin than hitting that same spot on the CB from straight on. The reason is that you're hitting farther from center when viewed from the new cue angle - but it doesn't increase the maximum amount of spin you can get from straight on. You can get the same amount of spin by hitting from straight on but a little farther from center - but then you'd miss the shot because of squirt.So I decided to apply the same thinking to side spin.
I participated in this experiment. I just want to use this opportunity to verify that no matter if you use:
phenolic
sniper
moori
lepro
jump cue
house cue
break cue
...that if you hit the cueball in the same place, and the cueball travels along the same initial path, and the cueball travels the same distance, the spin will be exactly the same.
In order for the CB to travel the same distance with more sidespin, the power transmitted by the cue stick would have to be:Even if that' true (which I don't doubt) you would also have to compare how much speed and power was put into the movement of the cue for each cue and shot to know if it is easier to get more spin out of different cues...
LOL. After that intro I'd better not screw this up.
Angling the cue doesn't increase the amount of spin you can get; it just compensates for the squirt caused by hitting offcenter. Some players do this by angling the cue and also changing their head position so their line of sight remains along the cue (they "aim" and stroke at the new angle); others do it by angling the cue without moving their head, so they're stroking across their line of sight (they "aim" straight but stroke angled). But both players (assuming they're using the same cue and hitting the same spot on the CB) have to angle the cue exactly the same amount or they'll miss the shot.
When you angle the cue without moving your head you're just using the common technique called Back Hand English - moving your back hand sideways to apply sidespin and automatically compensate for squirt. Other players might angle their cue a conscious amount or "by feel" and move their head along with it or not, but they're all making the same compensation (changing their cue to the same angle) - and no extra sidespin is produced by anybody.
In this case, it's really all in how you look at it.
pj
chgo