Put the cue ball on the headstring a diamond from the side rail. Hit the back corner ball on that side about 1/3 ball with outside english. The cue ball then hits foot, side, other-side, head rail and dies. Adjust the hit and spin to get both the correct path and reasonably safe break.BVal said:Hi everyone.
I was wondering if one of you guys could do a cuetable layout of the ideal opening break shot.
I have an idea of the best way but I am not positive.
I shoot right handed.
Thanks,
BVal
Thanks for taking the time to reply Bob. That was pretty much what I was doing but I was hitting it with outside running english instead of just outside english. I also wasn't sure how much of the corner ball to hit.Bob Jewett said:Put the cue ball on the headstring a diamond from the side rail. Hit the back corner ball on that side about 1/3 ball with outside english. The cue ball then hits foot, side, other-side, head rail and dies. Adjust the hit and spin to get both the correct path and reasonably safe break.
How the rack breaks depends on which balls are touching. If the rack is truly tight, you cannot get the classic two-to-the-rail-and-back shot.
Bob Jewett said:How the rack breaks depends on which balls are touching. If the rack is truly tight, you cannot get the classic two-to-the-rail-and-back shot.
Steve Lipsky said:Also, bval, in pool vernacular, running english = outside english. They are one and the same as used commonly.
- Steve
Bob Jewett said:Put the cue ball on the headstring a diamond from the side rail. Hit the back corner ball on that side about 1/3 ball with outside english. The cue ball then hits foot, side, other-side, head rail and dies. Adjust the hit and spin to get both the correct path and reasonably safe break.
How the rack breaks depends on which balls are touching. If the rack is truly tight, you cannot get the classic two-to-the-rail-and-back shot.
I meant I was hitting high outside instead of parallel outside english.Steve Lipsky said:Bob, speaking from a purely anecdotal perspective, the only times I've seen opening break shots act in the classic manner is if the back row is tight.
More to the point, I've concluded it is by far the largest factor influencing the success of the shot - much more so than the proper hit on the object ball. Since I've made my opponents start paying attention to the back row, I almost don't even mind breaking anymore.
Can you please clarify what you mean?
Also, bval, in pool vernacular, running english = outside english. They are one and the same as used commonly.
- Steve
[edit: sorry, running english = outside english on this type of a shot, is what I meant. There are times when inside english would be considered running english, but not when hitting an object ball in this manner.]
BVal said:I meant I was hitting high outside instead of parallel outside english.
BVal
Thank you for the help and I am sorry for the confusion I causedtsw_521 said:Ah, follow and running English instead of just running English.
I don't think it makes a huge difference on the break shot. You can catch the third rail either way. I typically use follow and running, but by the time the cue ball reaches the object ball you'll pretty much have natural roll on the cue ball anyway.
Sure. The only time you can get the perfect break is when the last row is loose from the next to last row. If the balls are really tight, the ball you hit will hit not one but rather two balls. The next ball along the back row will also hit two balls, and so on.Steve Lipsky said:... Can you please clarify what you mean? ...
And that explains why you can't get a "perfect" break in VP3, doesn't it? They're emulating a perfect rackBob Jewett said:The only time you can get the perfect break is when the last row is loose from the next to last row.
mullyman said:Hold up, for the past 25 years I've thought running english was outside and a little above center. The above center moving it forward (running) and the spin (english). Are you 100% sure running english is center outside?
MULLY
Inside and outside side spin refer to how the side spin rubs on the object ball. It has nothing to do with cushions.mullyman said:Hold up, for the past 25 years I've thought running english was outside and a little above center. The above center moving it forward (running) and the spin (english). Are you 100% sure running english is center outside?
MULLY
Bob Jewett said:Sure. The only time you can get the perfect break is when the last row is loose from the next to last row. If the balls are really tight, the ball you hit will hit not one but rather two balls. The next ball along the back row will also hit two balls, and so on.
(In the discussion of nine ball racks, a lot of people seem to think that if the balls are within 1/16 of an inch, or 1/100, or 1/1000 of an inch of each other, they are touching. Such people are confused. I hope that no such confused people are here. The balls are either touching or they are not, and whether balls are touching is very, very, very, very important to how they break apart.)
In a tight rack, the back balls are touching the balls in the next to last row at eight spots. They will be touching each other at four spots If you don't know whether each of those twelve spots is touching, you don't know what kind of rack your opponent has given you.
Starting with a tight rack, shift the entire back row a little to the left -- the thickness of a piece of paper is sufficient -- but still touching the next to last row at four spots and touching each other. If you break from one side, you will get a perfect break. If you break from the other side, it will be a disaster.
Choosing which side to break from according to which balls in the rack are loose is important if you hope to play perfectly. I usually just break whatever my opponent throws up on the table.
mullyman said:Hold up, for the past 25 years I've thought running english was outside and a little above center. The above center moving it forward (running) and the spin (english). Are you 100% sure running english is center outside?
MULLY