I don't know Krupa, I think that if you just flip the shot and practice it from the side with the clearing, it's still the same shot.
I don't know Krupa, I think that if you just flip the shot and practice it from the side with the clearing, it's still the same shot.
I hear you.It isn't for me... I don't know if its an eye dominance thing or what but I have more trouble cutting balls to the right than the left. (I realize that the shoot shown is to the left, but you get my point)
Shove it into a corner...you got one side and one end to practice on.
44 x 88 follows the same proportional formula (In relation to the nominal size) as 4.5 x 9. Which is 50" x 100"."Real 4 x 8s are 46 x 92... 44 x 88 is the dreaded "home" table. Adequate for
laundry storage perhaps, but not pool.
Dale
I've got a 10 by 16ft area. I would like to get an 8ft table. What do you all think?
Thanks!
Not exactly.
Pool table dimensions are according to a secret formula. I will now reveal that formula. The smaller dimension (such as 4.5 feet) is defined as "the green part the short way". That means the playing surface plus two inches on each side for the green part of the rail. For a 4.5-foot table, that's 54 inches total (4*12+12/2) and when you subtract four inches for the cushions you get 50 inches nose-to-nose the short way. The long way is twice the short way, nose-to-nose, on all tables but snooker tables.
I'll leave it to the clever student to figure out how large a "4x8" table should be, nose-to-nose. A 5x10 foot table is 60-4 inches the short way and 112 inches the long way.
As for the OP, the table-in-the-corner trick works for some people but I'd hate it. I have better uses for a room that large.
As for the on-line guidelines from manufacturers about needed room, just remember that those guides are tools to sell the largest possible table to recreational players and are not designed to make serious players happy with their situation. But most serious players already know how much room they're comfortable with, even if they don't know the exact number of feet.