pooltchr said:Draw is more about your stroke than about the kind of equipment you use. A medium to hard tip combined with the proper stroke will get you all the draw you need. The best cue, tip, ferrule and anything else won't help if you don't have the right stroke for the job.
Steve
Aoperator said:I realize that the stroke is the main componant, but I think equipment does have some influence on it also. i have read that a softer ferrule would increase draw but was wondering if there were anymore thought on the subject.
I test my tips on my table since I put them on myself.Aoperator said:What combination fo shaft, ferrule, tip, (such as brand, layered, hard medium, or soft), and tip shape, with all other things being equal, should give the maxium amount of draw on the cue ball?
I think the advice you've received so far is right on the mark - it's really the stroke that counts. That said, the equipment does have some effect I believe, not much, but some. A harder tip and lower squirt shaft should give you a little more spin. Some say that a more flexible shaft has the same effect. But I think the differences are small compared to other factors.Aoperator said:... Being right handed I slipped the cue behind my back and was going to apply just enough draw to stop the ball or back it up slightly. I hit the shot and drew the ball the entire lenght of the table with a medium stroke. I was astonished but never could figure out what made be able to do this from that awkward position when I could never do it when I was really trying my hardest.
Scott Lee said:Aoperator...Equipment has NO bearing on the ability to draw the CB. It's ALL about the quality of your stroke. As was said in another post, an expert player with a beautiful, smooth stroke can draw the CB easily, even with a house cue. There is no combination of shaft/ferrule/tip that provides better action than another, without the expertise to know how to use it properly.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
The argument for a hard tip potentially yielding more spin is that its contact time is shorter. This allows a greater average tip offset before miscue territory is reached as the ball begins to rotate. And generally speaking, the magnitude of the friction force is independent of the size of the contact area.Billy_Bob said:P.S. Look at the following high speed video of a draw shot. Notice how the tip "dents in". This is why I think I got better results when trying a very soft (brand new not compressed from use) Elk Master tip - it compressed more and had more surface contacting the cue ball. And a very hard phenolic tip would not do this. Would probably tend to miscue or slip off the ball.
Draw shot...
http://www.engr.colostate.edu/~dga/pool/high_speed_videos/new/HSVA-38.htm
Colin Colenso said:The physical properties of the tip, in so far as how it holds chalk and its effectiveness in gripping to the CB is VERY important.
I'm very surprised that you would say that equiptment has NO bearing Scott. You ever tried drawing a table length with a square shaped cardboard/rock tip that comes standard with some rack cues?
What does the CB know about smooth anyway? It knows velocity, point of impact, mass of colliding object and amount of grip/friction.
Billy_Bob said:For those who say equipment does not matter, please draw your cue ball with a phenolic tipped cue which has a quarter shape!
pooltchr said:Draw is more about your stroke than about the kind of equipment you use. A medium to hard tip combined with the proper stroke will get you all the draw you need. The best cue, tip, ferrule and anything else won't help if you don't have the right stroke for the job.
Steve
The largest inpact the tip has is its shape. When you draw the ball, even with a very level stroke, the cue ball is contacted near the edge of your tip. The rounder your tip, dime, nickle or whatever, the closer the center of your cue contacts the cue ball. This results in a lower contact point on the cue ball. The lower, the more spin, and it increases mathimatically as you get farther from the center. A good level stroke and a low contact point results in the best backspin.Scott Lee said:Colin...What I meant is exactly what the original poster questioned. The ability to get action on the CB is related to mechanics (albeit some conditions must exist...i.e: round tip, good chalk), not which tip, shaft or ferrule you have. It continues to amaze me how many people are fooled into thinking 'this tip' draws better than 'that tip'. Nonsense, imo. Although there has been some technological advances in cues, if you have no stroke, it won't matter what tip/shaft/ferrule you use.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com