Pool Hal.

JAM

I am the storm
Silver Member
In my hunt for pool videos, which could be anywhere in my house, I came across this tiny, tiny CD. I have never seen anything like it before. It's like half the size of a normal CD, and on the case, it says "JAM Files."

I put it aside until this morning. I didn't think my desktop computer would play such a small thingie, but I inserted the little CD in my E drive, and what do you know, it had some data on it.

The first file folder had several dozen oldies, songs from the '60s era. Some of them were kind of bubble-gum music, but there was a little Motown, which I liked. :cool:

Then there was a PDF article entitled "9-Ball Racks My Pride and Joy." Then there is a 2-page Word document entitled Pool Hal.

What is this? Does anybody know?
 

Attachments

I couldn't open the file , could it be from a digital camera , or maybe someone recorded it and gave it to you?
 
It opened for me as a Word Document. Seems like an old article.

"There are only 3 angles for any shot, on any size table. This includes; caroms, single rail banks, double rail banks, 1, 2, 3, and 4 rail banks, and double kiss banks. Any table has a 2 to 1 ratio; 3 1/2 x 7, 4 x 8, 4 1/2 x 9, 5 x 10, 6 x 12. It is always twice as long as it is wide. The table corners are 90-degree angles. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the corner pocket, you are forming an angle of 45 degrees. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the middle diamond on the same end rail, you are forming an angle of 30 degrees. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the first diamond on the same end rail, you are forming an angle of 15 degrees. When you add up these 3 angles, they total 90 degrees, which is the same angle formed by the table corners. The cue ball relation to object ball relation shot angle is always 15, 30, or 45 degrees. The solution is very simple. There are only 2 edges on the cue ball to aim with, and they are always exactly in the same place on the cue ball. There are only 3 exact spots on the object ball to aim to, and they are always exactly in the same place on the object ball. So, 2 edges on the cue ball, and 3 spots on the object ball; 2 x 3 = 6, which is the total number of table pockets. This means that, depending upon how the cue ball and object ball lie in relation to one another, you may either pocket the object ball directly into a pocket or bank it into any one of the remaining 5 pockets. Of course, the reverse is true. If the relationship of cue ball to object ball can only be a bank, so be it. There is never a need to look at a pocket or cushion while lining up the edge on the cue ball to the spot on the object ball. You have only those 3 angles. Your only requirement is to recognize whether your shot is a 15, 30, or 45 degree angle. Recognizing those 3 angles can be accomplished in an instant by aiming the edge of the cue ball to one of the spots on the object ball. It will be obvious which object ball spot is correct. There will be no doubt. Any time either one of the 2 edges on the cue ball is aimed at any one of the 3 spots on the object ball, that object ball must go to a pocket. Choose the correct spot and the object ball will most certainly go to the chosen pocket. The top professional players in the game have always known about this professional aiming system, but they are a closed fraternity, and you are the enemy.

Interested in where those spots are located?


The 2 places on the cue ball are the left edge of the cue ball when you are cutting the object ball to the left; and the right edge of the cue ball when you are cutting the object ball to the right. The 3 spots on the object ball are the quarters, and the center. The quarters and center of the object ball face straight at the edges of your cue ball, they do not facing toward the pocket. In other words, if you were on a workbench at home, there would be no pocket, so you would just line up the edge of the cue ball straight to your target on the object ball. When you cut to the left for 15 degrees, aim the left cue ball edge at the object ball left quarter. When you cut to the left for 30 degrees, aim the cue ball left edge at the object ball center. When you cut to the left for 45 degrees, aim the cue ball left edge at the object ball right quarter. When you cut to the right for 15 degrees, you aim the cue ball right edge at the object ball right quarter. When you cut to the right for 30 degrees, you aim the cue ball right edge at the object center. When you cut to the right for 45 degrees, you aim the right cue ball edge to the object ball left quarter. If you'll just get down and aim your old way, you'll be close to where you should be aiming. Look to see (without changing your head or eye position) just where the cue ball edge is aiming at the object ball. You'll see that on every shot that the cue ball edge is always aiming at the same targets on the object ball. Remember, this system is for any shot on the table; banks, caroms, combinations, and so forth. The only shot remaining is the extreme cut for any shot over 45 degrees. Aim the cue ball edge to the eighth of the object ball (which is half of the quarter). Don't let the pocket influence you. Have a friend hold the ball tray between the object ball and the pocket, so you cannot see the pocket, and you'll see that those 3 angles will handle just about anything.
Of course, you would have chosen the 15, 30, or 45-degree angle before your friend put the ball tray in place. It also makes it much more interesting if you don't tell your friend how you are pocketing the ball without seeing the pocket. Have some fun. For any questions, call me.
Regards,
POOL HAL"

I welcome your comments."
 
Thanks, Woof! :)

Here is the other attachment. It was a PDF, which I could not attach with this forum's software, so I did a PrintScreen and converted it to a JPEG.
 

Attachments

  • Racking Secrets.jpg
    Racking Secrets.jpg
    100.7 KB · Views: 1,555
Burn it in Mt Doom immediately. That's an AIMING SYSTEM! Careful you don't get any on you, it's tough to get off even with anti-biotics and prayers.

The breaking note is interesting, it's exactly what Tucker has in his instruction video.
 
Burn it in Mt Doom immediately. That's an AIMING SYSTEM! Careful you don't get any on you, it's tough to get off even with anti-biotics and prayers.

The breaking note is interesting, it's exactly what Tucker has in his instruction video.

It's Hal Houle
 
Those mini CDs are funny, you see them so rarely... sometimes when you got some minor bit of computer hardware the driver would come on one.

Maybe the CD was a gift from some other pool player to you, but got lost in the shuffle.
Sounds like an early explanation of Hal Houle's CTE and the book version of Joe Tucker's Racking Secrets.
 
It opened for me as a Word Document. Seems like an old article.

"There are only 3 angles for any shot, on any size table. This includes; caroms, single rail banks, double rail banks, 1, 2, 3, and 4 rail banks, and double kiss banks. Any table has a 2 to 1 ratio; 3 1/2 x 7, 4 x 8, 4 1/2 x 9, 5 x 10, 6 x 12. It is always twice as long as it is wide. The table corners are 90-degree angles. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the corner pocket, you are forming an angle of 45 degrees. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the middle diamond on the same end rail, you are forming an angle of 30 degrees. When you lay a cue from the side pocket to the first diamond on the same end rail, you are forming an angle of 15 degrees. When you add up these 3 angles, they total 90 degrees, which is the same angle formed by the table corners. The cue ball relation to object ball relation shot angle is always 15, 30, or 45 degrees. The solution is very simple. There are only 2 edges on the cue ball to aim with, and they are always exactly in the same place on the cue ball. There are only 3 exact spots on the object ball to aim to, and they are always exactly in the same place on the object ball. So, 2 edges on the cue ball, and 3 spots on the object ball; 2 x 3 = 6, which is the total number of table pockets. This means that, depending upon how the cue ball and object ball lie in relation to one another, you may either pocket the object ball directly into a pocket or bank it into any one of the remaining 5 pockets. Of course, the reverse is true. If the relationship of cue ball to object ball can only be a bank, so be it. There is never a need to look at a pocket or cushion while lining up the edge on the cue ball to the spot on the object ball. You have only those 3 angles. Your only requirement is to recognize whether your shot is a 15, 30, or 45 degree angle. Recognizing those 3 angles can be accomplished in an instant by aiming the edge of the cue ball to one of the spots on the object ball. It will be obvious which object ball spot is correct. There will be no doubt. Any time either one of the 2 edges on the cue ball is aimed at any one of the 3 spots on the object ball, that object ball must go to a pocket. Choose the correct spot and the object ball will most certainly go to the chosen pocket. The top professional players in the game have always known about this professional aiming system, but they are a closed fraternity, and you are the enemy.

Interested in where those spots are located?


The 2 places on the cue ball are the left edge of the cue ball when you are cutting the object ball to the left; and the right edge of the cue ball when you are cutting the object ball to the right. The 3 spots on the object ball are the quarters, and the center. The quarters and center of the object ball face straight at the edges of your cue ball, they do not facing toward the pocket. In other words, if you were on a workbench at home, there would be no pocket, so you would just line up the edge of the cue ball straight to your target on the object ball. When you cut to the left for 15 degrees, aim the left cue ball edge at the object ball left quarter. When you cut to the left for 30 degrees, aim the cue ball left edge at the object ball center. When you cut to the left for 45 degrees, aim the cue ball left edge at the object ball right quarter. When you cut to the right for 15 degrees, you aim the cue ball right edge at the object ball right quarter. When you cut to the right for 30 degrees, you aim the cue ball right edge at the object center. When you cut to the right for 45 degrees, you aim the right cue ball edge to the object ball left quarter. If you'll just get down and aim your old way, you'll be close to where you should be aiming. Look to see (without changing your head or eye position) just where the cue ball edge is aiming at the object ball. You'll see that on every shot that the cue ball edge is always aiming at the same targets on the object ball. Remember, this system is for any shot on the table; banks, caroms, combinations, and so forth. The only shot remaining is the extreme cut for any shot over 45 degrees. Aim the cue ball edge to the eighth of the object ball (which is half of the quarter). Don't let the pocket influence you. Have a friend hold the ball tray between the object ball and the pocket, so you cannot see the pocket, and you'll see that those 3 angles will handle just about anything.
Of course, you would have chosen the 15, 30, or 45-degree angle before your friend put the ball tray in place. It also makes it much more interesting if you don't tell your friend how you are pocketing the ball without seeing the pocket. Have some fun. For any questions, call me.
Regards,
POOL HAL"

I welcome your comments."

All this is absolutely true.....until you factor in: Cloth speed, humidity, rail uniformity, ball uniformity, the Stevie Ray Vaughn cd skipping in the juke box, my hangover, shot nerves due to my wifes visit from her aunt Flo, bad seafood causing bowel distress, a bad back because I thought I was superman up until I was 25 and the number one reason of all.......bad chalk!

Cool read though, thanks for posting it JAM!
 
The aiming thing is Hal Houle and Hal admits it does not work and no longer teaches it.
 
Yep, Hal Houle. Contact Beat'm with a Stick guy and he can give you a few missing pieces.

Respect, Courage, and Commitment!
 
Its CTE stuff.

Lou Figueroa

_________________________________
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My Review of a CTE Based DVD:
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showpost.php?p=2871644&postcount=77[/


I decided to remove my comments. I do not like being negative .

Stan Shuffett

It's not being negative when you get fed up with petty BS and childish, passive aggressive sniping. You just stuck up for yourself and said your piece.

Best,
Mike
 
That would be because it's a scan of pages 12 and 13 of Joe Tucker's Racking Secrets book.
At least it appears to be.

I was all set to find out the secret and it stopped. Without page 14 I'll never know the secret unless I can find a copy of Joe Tucker's book.

James
 
I was all set to find out the secret and it stopped. Without page 14 I'll never know the secret unless I can find a copy of Joe Tucker's book.

James

As popular as Joe Tucker's book Racking Secrets is, it sure would be cool if he got it re-published or updated it. I'd venture to guess that it would a bestseller in the pool world today. :smile:
 
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