New Olhausen tournament model..................

Why isn't anybody in this thread referring to the older version of the Olhausen table as the Champion Pro table?

Wasn't that what it was officially called?
 
Just returned from the tourney in Green Bay. I grabbed this flyer from the Olhausen booth. These price points were written on the flyers.
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I don't really agree with that . The geometry of the olhausen pockets are known to be wrong, (Olhausen has even admitted to it )and will rattle cleanly hit balls. A clean hit ball on a Diamond will fall.

Even the biggest Diamond hater on here doesn't agree with your opinion.

But you have your right to your opinion .
Plenty of people hate how diamond pockets play. Rodney Morris being an elite pro that comes to mind. If olhausen pockets are “incorrect” then Rasson pockets are also incorrect.
 
Plenty of people hate how diamond pockets play. Rodney Morris being an elite pro that comes to mind. If olhausen pockets are “incorrect” then Rasson pockets are also incorrect.
Last I read Rasson pockets are the same geometry as the Diamond or close to but the Diamond has a deeper shelf which can hang more balls. The geometry of the Olhausens are off .
 
Why isn't anybody in this thread referring to the older version of the Olhausen table as the Champion Pro table?

Wasn't that what it was officially called?
My guess is Olhausen has been completely out of the commercial and tournament space longer than Brunswick has, and no one even knew/remembered what they were called other than "Olhausen rattle tables".
 
Why isn't anybody in this thread referring to the older version of the Olhausen table as the Champion Pro table?

Wasn't that what it was officially called?
Grand Champion is the name of the Tournament Pro predecessor.
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When I started playing about 15 years ago, I bought a Olhausen table. It was one of their furniture tables. The wife liked how it looked in the house, and at first, I felt it played OK. However, as I began to improve, I began to notice issues that caused me to question exactly how should a table play, and what was considered "normal" or "ideal". Reading prior comments it is obvious that what is normal, ideal, or correct, is personal preference. Especially when it comes to which balls should and shouldn't be accepted.

In my case, thinking about the construction of a table, it occurred to me that the contribution of the slate is pretty much the same for most decent tables and you can put on whatever cloth you prefer. So it came down to well supported/stable slate(s), rails with the correct geometry/appropriate cushions, and of course pocket angles. Things like flush pockets certainly add to playability. Colors, style, etc, don't affect how it plays and are secondary.

My final straw with the Olhausen came when I was kneeling next to the long rail, arms resting on the rail. I bounced a ball off the opposite rail and felt the entire table move. I gave the table away and got something that met my criteria. A frame that felt rock solid, correctly calibrated and solidly mounted rails, with properly matched cushions, heights, pocket geometry, as well as aesthetics. I don't see ever outgrowing my table again.

I do like the looks of the new Olhausen. I hope it plays much better than my old table, as well as many others on which I've played.
 
I wonder which rail rubber they use on the newer model tables? The Accu-fast rubber is 1/3 the mass and size of Artemis. The 12 year old 9’ Olhausen tables at our community clubhouse were just recovered with Simonis 860HR and they play slow. And yes, the pocket angles are incorrect.
 
Look kind of cheap and unfinished to me. Exposed shiny bolt heads sticking out on the legs is a very cheap and unthought out look to their construction methods. Also, while hard to tell by the picture, the side pockets appear to have screw heads sticking out holding the pockets down. Top rail plastic covering rolling over the edge looks cheap also. These are just my views though and could change if I were to see it in person. They are sponsoring WPBA extensively now though, and that is a good thing.
Wife and I were going to stop in and see some of the TMT as it's only about a 40 min drive from our summer place, but I don't know now as there is so much rain predicted, we are not sure when we will be going that way.
I like the bolts, there and on the pockets, kind of the industrial look.
 
Are these tables on the level of Diamond, Rasson, or Predator, I doubt it, but the fact of the matter is there is a lot of money involved here in sponsorship deals, and knowing that, I doubt you will hear any pro player complain as sponsorship is king. They all will be playing on the same tables and will adjust if needed.
You almost never hear a true professional complain, be it a 7' Valley or whatever, if the money is there they just buckle down and do what's needed to win, no matter the tables.
Complaining seems to be a spectator thing, and no surprise a AZB thing, ha ha.
In the late 90's at one of the Tournament Of Champions they were using a Grand Champion. Earl was not real quite about his disdain for the corner pocket. Hopkins added that the players were having trouble with that pocket. The rattle.
 
I wonder which rail rubber they use on the newer model tables? The Accu-fast rubber is 1/3 the mass and size of Artemis. The 12 year old 9’ Olhausen tables at our community clubhouse were just recovered with Simonis 860HR and they play slow. And yes, the pocket angles are incorrect.

The spec sheet previously posted answers this. Accu-fast K66 with height of 1-7/16. My main question is did the fix the pocket angles? One vendor website says yes but others do not mention this.
 
I played on the new Olhausen at the Hopkin's Expo in April. I had my own set of balls and was there about 1am after the exhibitors all closed trying the new Olhausen, new GC7 9' and 7', and the Rasson. I probably played about 30 min each on all 4 tables. They all played good. I didn't notice any issues with the Olhausen pockets rejecting balls. The GC7 was my favorite. But I didn't see anything wrong with the Olhausen.

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This below picture was showing the parting line from the injection molding of the Olhausen pocket. It was fine, didn't bother me. (same as the GC7 9' and 7'). However on the Rasson, they put the parting line on the very top, and it scraped my hand. Was a poor engineering decision on the Rasson, and probably designed by an engineer that didn't play pool. I'm an engineer in my dayjob, and have had to design around sharp parting line edges many times. Putting it at the top is easiest from a molding perspective, that's why they put it there.
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This pic below is the new Brunswick pocket (same on 7' and 9'). The PL is about 1/4" below the top. That's harder from a molding perspective, but much better from a player perspective.
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Rasson below:
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All the tables mentioned had a bigger radius here than the Diamond, resulting in a shorter shelf near the pocket facings. This leaves less shelf for the ball to hang up on. Much better than the Diamond shelf, IMO. I'm talking about the radius of the cut from left to right, it's flatter on the Olhausen. NOT talking about the radius "drop" on the edge of the slate.
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