docgpmiller
Active member
Yeah this sounds like a Dr. Dave investigation and do some analysis. Dr. Dave has proven and disproven different things over the years.
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
I totally agree.Sorry but that makes no sense to me.
It's because you didn't have your lucky socks on the right footI have two pairs of pool shoes, one for ghost-ball and one for CTE. I got 'em mixed up and now i can't make a ball.
Relax bud.Yeah this sounds like a Dr. Dave investigation and do some analysis. Dr. Dave has proven and disproven different things over the years.
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Yeah I get it- I am new to the Board- I know it's just part of it. I started playing 48 years ago then quit playing serious pool for 40 years and now just getting back into the last 1-1/2 years.Relax bud.
Everyone is just ribbing you.
It's good natured though.
Take it in stride.
You are relatively new here so are probably somewhat of a newbie to the game.
I could be wrong.
Sometimes posting here is like doing standup comedy.
You get heckled.
Enjoy your journey.
It's a great game and no matter your level there is still learning I n your future.
I'm still traveling down the road of my journey too and my Fargo is only 895.
Hahahaha.
Put the ghost ball shoe on the left foot, the CTE shoe on the right foot. Then click your heels together and say.... "Theres no place like Turning Stone".I have two pairs of pool shoes, one for ghost-ball and one for CTE. I got 'em mixed up and now i can't make a ball.
Center ball to a maximum of 1 tip above center on single bank shots. I try to avoid side spin unless I have to compensate to go long or short of my natural medium speed shot bank. I don't do the 2:1 slow roll very often as I don't control that as well, compared to my other standard banks. That is for side banks. Longitudinal Banks I am using more of a 2:1. Shot speed varies based on CB and OB positions.Do you use a lot of english, side spin, when you bank?
Same boat as me.Yeah I get it- I am new to the Board- I know it's just part of it. I started playing 48 years ago then quit playing serious pool for 40 years and now just getting back into the last 1-1/2 years.
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
I like to use a 19 oz cue on slow tables, and an 18 oz cue on fast tables. It usually works for me.Something along the lines of OP. 2 cues, one sort of dead, the other more lively. As long as the deflection is similar, adjustment would be minimal. Use dead cue on faster table, and the other cue on the slow table. Opinions?
So when I shoot banks on the Gold Crown for many years I have learned my Bank Shots a certain way. If I shoot on the Diamond of course they are slightly short due to the Rails which is widely known. I purchased a Viking Vikore Shaft and installed a Black Kamui Super Soft Tip and it will go long about a quarter Diamond on the the Gold Crown. So When I play on the Diamond Table it is just right to compensate for the Diamond shortness. Therefore, for MY GAME I am able to shoot the same on Gold Crowns and Diamonds with just Changing out my Shaft. BTW I use a Viking Vpro Shaft and Elkmaster Soft tip on my Gold Crown tables.
Ummmmmmmmmm no.Hey guys I’m new here , I actually do the same thing … Does anyone wanna play some ? lol
This threat and its entire premise is ludicrous.
A contention by changing a tip can make to inherently different pool tables play the same to an end user is beyond insanity. It is akin to saying you can make your minivan drive like a sedan by changing your shoes.
Trollololollolololol
Yeah I understand what you are saying and I am not arguing the point at all - I just wanted to know if there were other people experience the same thing or like you said it is something else going on - which over time, I think I will be able to figure out what it is.I had someone just yesterday try to tell me that she uses english to make the cueball go to the left or the right. So if she wants to "not scratch" and the cueball to move to the left, she hits the cueball on the left side. Had absolutely no idea about the tangent line or aim or what spin does, but to her mind the side spin on the cueball is what made it go to the side, not the angle of the shot. She took the effect and applied it to the wrong cause. Note this was a 3 in the APA so about a D, D+ level player, but she was fully convinced, and tried to argue with me me, that what she was doing was causing the cueball to go to one side or the other even after I demonstrated on like 20 shots that it's not.
I think the same thing is being done here, especially after such a short period of time. Why you would bank better with another tip has nothing to do with the tip, you just happened to bank well on that table for 10 minutes and the equipment had nothing to do with it.