Agree, 100 percent! They still don't play nearly as good as a diamond, IMHO.
Again I'm not saying whatever you do to a Valley that it's going to play like a Diamond. But that is a rare situation that there are NO Diamonds in a big city like Tacoma. I'll bet the Valley's were very old and just about garbage so with the trade in from Diamond it was worth the gamble that he will get enough players and bangers that want to play on Diamonds instead of new Valley's. If the Diamonds cost more to play on he might just get a wave of new players for awhile and then the tide will go back out taking some the old customers that won't pay more for pool with it. You never know what upping something 50 cents will do. Johnnyt
JT:
I never saw anywhere in Glen's post that the proprietor of the establishment raised the price of coin drop, nevermind a highway robbery price of +50 cents. I think you [wrongfully] assumed this. I know up here in NY, a game costs $1.00 already on Valleys. (There are few places -- very few and far between -- that might charge $0.75, but that's rare!) The proprietor is NOT going to raise the price to $1.50, as you suggest. First, the leagues would throw a BLOODY fit, then quit, and so would the customers. That kind of plan to recoup the cost of the Diamond table would backfire BIG TIME.
The intent in making up for the price of the table via coin drop is NOT by raising the price of per-game coin drop. Rather, it's volume -- more people are going to want to play on that beautiful new Diamond than the "ho-hum" Valley.
As a matter of fact, Greg Sullivan put a challenge to me last year when I spent some time with him at SBE. He says in those establishments that have two or more Valley tables, he recommends NOT replacing all of them at once. Rather, the idea is to replace only one or two, and watch where the most coin drop occurs. Greg's challenge to me was that he *BETS* his table will get the most coin drop by huge margin. Otherwise, if he loses the bet, he'll concede and work out a plan with the proprietor to take the Diamond back and reinstall the old Valley table. That was last year, but I'll wager that Greg would still be just as aggressive with his upgrade plan.
The beauty of Diamond Smart Tables is the cue ball detection -- it's optical, not magnetic- or weight-dependent. So as long as the cue ball is "white," it will return. No need for cue ball modifications like adding metal slugs or magnetic foil inside the cue ball itself, which we all know tremendously modifies the behavior of the cue ball. Just a regular cue ball -- e.g. a Brunswick Blue Circle Centennial or Aramith Red Circle works just fine. Even a measles ball returns on a Smart Table. Try that on a Valley, without opening up the side panel (thereby disabling the purpose of coin drop to begin with).
Although its debatable whether your average bar banger will ever notice the difference between cue balls (except those that know how to draw their rock -- they'll notice "hey, the cue ball is very zingy for some 'strange' reason -- I can draw the p!ss out of it on this table!"), leaguers will definitely notice. And they'll notice they can jump much easier, as well.
You might want to keep these things in mind about the Diamonds -- they really *DO* play much different than the Valleys, and there are cost justifications that, in the end, level out.
FYI,
-Sean
First off I said "IF" he raised the price. Second, do you know for sure he's "NOT" going to raise the price? Three, stop talking to me like your my father. Johnnyt
I was not aware that a Diamond smart table will return the measle ball or the blue circle ball. I thought it was just the red circle.
Yup, that's true. There nothing unique about the Aramith Red Circle -- it's just a standard cue ball, and, because it handles draw so well, is a favorite of 9-ballers (that's why it's so popular, and seems to be the "standard" on Diamond tables in certain establishments -- everyone's familiar with it).
But yes, any white cue ball will return on a Diamond Smart Table. That's the beauty of the optical sensor -- it puts a *standard* cue ball back into the bar table environment.
-Sean
Yeah, but the side pockets on Diamonds are buckets.Yup, that's true. There nothing unique about the Aramith Red Circle -- it's just a standard cue ball, and, because it handles draw so well, is a favorite of 9-ballers (that's why it's so popular, and seems to be the "standard" on Diamond tables in certain establishments -- everyone's familiar with it).
But yes, any white cue ball will return on a Diamond Smart Table. That's the beauty of the optical sensor -- it puts a *standard* cue ball back into the bar table environment.
-Sean
First off I said "IF" he raised the price. Second, do you know for sure he's "NOT" going to raise the price? Three, stop talking to me like your my father. Johnnyt
dear mr.HudsonSmith , can you post picture of the whole table?
please!
Not meaning to correct anyone here, but first of all the Valley tables that I replaced with the Diamonds were set at .75 cents a game, so the Diamonds were also set at .75cents a game.
Then, the cue balls are separated by density, not color...so a normal white cue ball won't work on a Diamond smart table, the cue ball has to have a certain minimum density in order for the cue ball separator to detect the difference between the cue ball and the object balls. The higher the density the easier it can tell which ball is the cue ball, that's the main reason the red circle cue ball was the choice cue ball for the Diamonds, although some other cue balls will work just as well, like the Brunswick black circle, and sometimes even the measle cue balls will work, though not all the time because they can vary quite a bit in density.
Glen
Glenn - Regarding the Smart table cue ball sensing system, I was under the impression that the system senses optical density... not mass density.
Right or wrong?
tia, take care brother.
No problem, Glen! Actually, I was soliciting your expert opinion. But .75 cents a game?!? How is that possible? I didn't know the U.S. Mint made denominations smaller than a penny! So that means for every dollar, I can play 133 games? Wow!![]()
now thats a good looking valley table!
Sorry I've taken so long to get the photo. My only excuse is "It's Vegas Baby" I hope this helps
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Looks nice. but now if they would get rid of ALL of the metal trim and replace the pocket inserts from rubber to leather it would be a real step in the right direction. What's so hard about it? Just give the consumer what they are looking for.