A lower deflection stroke would be one that starts off soft and gentle and has minimum grip on the stick to execute. Which brings up things that can be lower deflection, bridge and grip. A loose sloppy bridge is lower deflection than a good open bridge and the old squeaky tight closed bridge is higher deflection than either. I believe a lower deflection bridge is going to have more flaws than advantages so I wouldn't soften up a bridge seeking lower deflection.
I have experimented with the softest grip possible to the tightest death grip possible. All grips work equally well talking about from just firm enough to maintain control of the cue to the tightest grip possible. You do have to adjust to the particular grip you are using. The firmer grips also have the disadvantage of burning a lot of energy and they can make your arm very sore. Trying to define grip is tough. Maybe like shaking hands with a lady or eight to ten year old child. Not dead fish but not much more.
Another question, would the lo7cation of weight in a cue matter as far as how it affects the cue ball? Two nineteen ounce sticks, identical as possible except one is balanced as far back as possible, one as close to the joint as possible. If the cue ball is hit in the same place and in the same direction, say one full tip of side spin, would the cue ball respond the same to both?
What could be gained with harmonic tuning? Few are going to play with the doorknob limbsaver unit hanging on their cue and I believe it is fairly heavy too but harmonic tuners do amazing things with rimfire barrels.
Digressing into rimfire barrels, the original group is usually just an irregular inch to inch and a half group at fifty yards. Then as the tuner is adjusted the groups form a string maybe an inch long. As the tuner is slowly adjusted the strings rotate either clockwise or counter-clockwise but a consistent rotation. Then the groups suck up to maybe one-tenth of the original group size. Some fine tuning each way usually reveals no more gains to be found.
I don't know but I suspect that the footpounds of energy shooting a rimfire are not that far from most pool shots. Might a small inline tuner at the joint be able to improve the harmonics of a shaft? I don't like the soft plastic vault plate/ferrule on carbon fiber shafts because I suspect they are to fix or hide a lousy hit much like the soft plastic joint in aluminum cues of the sixties or seventies. Possibly a tuner could improve the feel of the hit without changing the maximum force transmitted to the cue ball.
Just some rambling thoughts. I'll back the soft gentle stroke with open bridge and the soft handshake pressure grip to minimize deflection. The grip would have more to do with deflection than the stroke but almost impossible to have a soft grip if you have a jerky start to the forward motion of the cue stick.
Hu
I have experimented with the softest grip possible to the tightest death grip possible. All grips work equally well talking about from just firm enough to maintain control of the cue to the tightest grip possible. You do have to adjust to the particular grip you are using. The firmer grips also have the disadvantage of burning a lot of energy and they can make your arm very sore. Trying to define grip is tough. Maybe like shaking hands with a lady or eight to ten year old child. Not dead fish but not much more.
Another question, would the lo7cation of weight in a cue matter as far as how it affects the cue ball? Two nineteen ounce sticks, identical as possible except one is balanced as far back as possible, one as close to the joint as possible. If the cue ball is hit in the same place and in the same direction, say one full tip of side spin, would the cue ball respond the same to both?
What could be gained with harmonic tuning? Few are going to play with the doorknob limbsaver unit hanging on their cue and I believe it is fairly heavy too but harmonic tuners do amazing things with rimfire barrels.
Digressing into rimfire barrels, the original group is usually just an irregular inch to inch and a half group at fifty yards. Then as the tuner is adjusted the groups form a string maybe an inch long. As the tuner is slowly adjusted the strings rotate either clockwise or counter-clockwise but a consistent rotation. Then the groups suck up to maybe one-tenth of the original group size. Some fine tuning each way usually reveals no more gains to be found.
I don't know but I suspect that the footpounds of energy shooting a rimfire are not that far from most pool shots. Might a small inline tuner at the joint be able to improve the harmonics of a shaft? I don't like the soft plastic vault plate/ferrule on carbon fiber shafts because I suspect they are to fix or hide a lousy hit much like the soft plastic joint in aluminum cues of the sixties or seventies. Possibly a tuner could improve the feel of the hit without changing the maximum force transmitted to the cue ball.
Just some rambling thoughts. I'll back the soft gentle stroke with open bridge and the soft handshake pressure grip to minimize deflection. The grip would have more to do with deflection than the stroke but almost impossible to have a soft grip if you have a jerky start to the forward motion of the cue stick.
Hu