RK,
Thanks for the pic. EZ.
You
Once the contact point on the OB is established, you capture the distance to the edge of the OB from that contact point. To see the eclipse or football, you need to be down on the shot so that you can visually overlap the CB edge the same distance to the other side of the contact point on the OB - the same original distance or opposite
The problem with this is that the CB will appear to be larger than the OB especially if the separation between the two is large. So the distance that you see on the smaller OB cannot be used on the CB to create the football for the proportions will be different.
This why I use the fraction of the OB from the contact point to its edge.to the same fraction on the larger CB - this is proportional. 1/4 of the OB to the obverse 1/4 on the CB or CP2CP.(contact point on the OB lined up with the contact point on the CB).
Say the shot is cutting the OB to the left. The football will materialize on the right side of the OB and the left side of the CB, but the center of the CB is also to the right of that aim line. The challenge is to move or get the cue to the right and parallel to that aim line so that the tip is now pointed at the center of the CB.
This becomes obvious when attempting a 90 degree cut.
Your concept is viable/usefull for some shooters that can visualize the football as you do.
Thanks and be well.
LAMas.. You're correct about the visual differences of the balls. I was thinking about adding more to this thread about CP2CP
and the tangent line.. or what I'd prefer to call the Stun Line. I once posted a thread about SLAP aiming (Stun Line Aim Point).
Actually the visual size of both balls makes absolutely no difference if you aim the CB center to where you want to hit the OB.
Even though the CB does look larger, the center is always the same. When the CB gets to the OB they're both the same size.
Find the aim point (edge of football) on the OB, past the contact point. Aim the center of the CB to the OB aim point and hit it.
That being said, you're correct again, if the center of the CB is aimed outside the OB edge. The football shape edge changes.
As stated, it is harder to judge the equal distance contact points as the cut angles get wider and I start looking at the stun line.
.
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