Colin,
Your comments are in
blue.
My eyes are about 2.25” apart or the diameter of a pool ball. So if I stroke between my eyes (1.125” between) with the cue under my chin, I can see the CTE line with my right eye and the left edge of the CB with my left eye. This, to me is correct if the CB and OB are touching each other center to center.
As the OB is farther away from the CB, I must shift my stance to the left to keep the left edge of the CB aligned with the left edge of the OB for it appears to be smaller. If the table was infinite in length, the OB being down table would appear to be a dot.
How they are visualized is still a mystery to me.
It seems reasonable that perception changes, making a thinner connection as the OB gets further away.
OK
Though at some point as it approaches the rail, the cut turns into a bank.
By a bank, do you mean that you miss the edge of the OB and hit the rail and not the OB?
This is confusing... as is when it goes from ETA to ETB and then ETC. My understanding is that both can be used when the angle is in the grey zone, which suggests that the ET lines are less critical than the CTE line. But, just guessing.
I believe that both are critical and as the ET (left eye) moves to capture A to B to C horizontally (left to right), the head, body and thus the stance moves horizontally to the left. If this is the case for the shooter, then the right eye moves off of the original CTE line as the stance moves to the left. This effects a thinner cut angle than CTE (right eye) as the left eye captures A and thinner as it captures B and thinner as it captures C.
While distance perception offers a possible path to explaining changing pot angles with the same perception, it can't provide an explanation for horizontal shifts, where the CB and OB are the same distance apart and from the pocket but with angles like 10 degrees, 15 degrees and 20 degrees.
To me, a 15 degree cut to the left would put the left edge of the CB as viewed with my left eye on the “A” location on the OB. My right eye moves off of the CTE line to the right and off of the OB…this is a problem I have with GB aiming for I no longer have a distinct spot to aim at on the OB. Using the left eye keeps it on the OB from left edge to A, to B, to C, and even the right edge for the 90degree cut angle. The 10 degree cut angle would be a bit short of A and the 20 degree cut angle would be a bit greater but not yet on C.
JB performs those 3 shots in this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8G7-xpyKlk
It's a total mystery to me how perception changes on these shots. That's why I assume that the visual somehow takes into account the table. But how? I don't know. Perhaps JB and others can describe their perception in these cases.
Over the years now, I use fractional distances between the edge, A, B, C and other edge, others have recommended that I tilt my head a bit to change my stance while keeping my left eye on say “A”.
This is your thread and I am not trolling it.