If you check out the glossary, Stan covers different bridge distances based on CB/OB distance. Seems more objective that way and easier to teach.
You can also keep a static bridge distance and alter the arc of your pivot (i.e. "effective pivot point", as Dr. Dave calls it) based on CB/OB distance. You do this by moving your tip along the OB plane -- so you're moving your cue from the tip-back (so the pivot point works itself out).
For me, that's as objective as it gets. I know Dr. Dave calls that "feel"--- but what's objective and what's feel is based solely on one's understanding of the information and his/her proficiency with executing the information. When that doesn't make sense and someone can't execute-- they guess -- and then call it feel. When you KNOW - you don't guess - and it's objective.
If you come across a shot and you're not sure what to do--- mark it off. Try it with A/B/C targets and both pivot directions. As Stan mentions in the glossary, with extremely close shots, you might have to go to edge-to-1/8th for some angles. One of the setups will pocket the ball (assuming it's not a ferris wheel carnival shot). Store the result. It really doesn't take a REAL long time to reduce ball pocketing to a few options. You just have to practice and stick with the info. It took me a few months, but then again--- I didn't have any instructional DVD haha.
Dave
You can also keep a static bridge distance and alter the arc of your pivot (i.e. "effective pivot point", as Dr. Dave calls it) based on CB/OB distance. You do this by moving your tip along the OB plane -- so you're moving your cue from the tip-back (so the pivot point works itself out).
For me, that's as objective as it gets. I know Dr. Dave calls that "feel"--- but what's objective and what's feel is based solely on one's understanding of the information and his/her proficiency with executing the information. When that doesn't make sense and someone can't execute-- they guess -- and then call it feel. When you KNOW - you don't guess - and it's objective.
If you come across a shot and you're not sure what to do--- mark it off. Try it with A/B/C targets and both pivot directions. As Stan mentions in the glossary, with extremely close shots, you might have to go to edge-to-1/8th for some angles. One of the setups will pocket the ball (assuming it's not a ferris wheel carnival shot). Store the result. It really doesn't take a REAL long time to reduce ball pocketing to a few options. You just have to practice and stick with the info. It took me a few months, but then again--- I didn't have any instructional DVD haha.
Dave