http://www.kamuibrand.com/billiard-en/?page_id=16&paged=2
This is an interesting link although I don't know what to say about it.
This is an interesting link although I don't know what to say about it.
Joey, unlike jschelin99, I thought the English was pretty good and easy enough to understand. But the explanation for the cause of deflection/squirt, and thus the (partial) remedy offered, is wrong. The article attributes it to slippage of the tip on the ball's surface. If that were the case, the amount of squirt would be variable from shot to shot given the same offset. Rather, squirt is the inevitable consequence of the ball rotating while the cue is in contact with it. This forces the cue to move sideways and because of the reaction force on the ball, it (the ball) must move in the opposite direction (some).http://www.kamuibrand.com/billiard-en/?page_id=16&paged=2
This is an interesting link although I don't know what to say about it.
Joey, unlike jschelin99, I thought the English was pretty good and easy enough to understand. But the explanation for the cause of deflection/squirt, and thus the (partial) remedy offered, is wrong. The article attributes it to slippage of the tip on the ball's surface. If that were the case, the amount of squirt would be variable from shot to shot given the same offset. Rather, squirt is the inevitable consequence of the ball rotating while the cue is in contact with it. This forces the cue to move sideways and because of the reaction force on the ball, it (the ball) must move in the opposite direction (some).
Jim
Jal: Yes, you're 100% right. If the cue stick deflects to the left, the cue ball must go to the right. Newton said it a couple hundred years ago, and it still applies to pool today no matter what chalk you use. Or no chalk at all!
What chalk did Lou Butera use when he ran 150 and out in 1973 (in a little more than 21 minutes...THAT'S what earned him the nickname!) earning him the nickname "Machine Gun Lou"?
Can't wait to see their "KAMUI chalk reduces deflection" page. I'm sure that's the page that will be backed up by science.
I had to stop reading after the fifth spelling error. I realize Kamui is based in Japan, and their English is far better than my Japanese, but come on. Run the text through a spell-checking program, or hire someone fluent in English to double-check the "our product is far superior to all others" manifesto.
If it grips better, the miscue limit will increase and you should be able to get more maximum spin on the ball. Of course, that would only apply when your tip offset is right near the new miscue limit. With the added spin will come more swerve, as you say. It won't swerve any faster, but if the cueball is allowed to reach natural roll, total swerve (the angle between its initial and final direction at roll) would be greater....If their chalk actually grips the cue ball better, is it plausible that in some cases, the swerve might be increased on spin shots, when using that chalk, which might result in a smaller amount of "effective squirt"?
Scott, wish I was but I ain't. (Got a B.S. eons ago, but memory is limited...)jschelin99...I'm sure Jim (Jal), a physicist, ....
I think it might take the tip a little time to "set up" on the cue ball and you might consider that slipping, but for the most part there is no real slip and the claim the OP refers to was, in my opinion, worthless marketing hype.If it grips better, the miscue limit will increase and you should be able to get more maximum spin on the ball. Of course, that would only apply when your tip offset is right near the new miscue limit. With the added spin will come more swerve, as you say. It won't swerve any faster, but if the cueball is allowed to reach natural roll, total swerve (the angle between its initial and final direction at roll) would be greater.
I believe there is a limit on how large a tip offset you can employ, regardless of whether or not a miscue (slip) takes place. And the typical limit of one-half radius from center happens to be fairly close to it. The reason is that the farther out from center you hit, the less the cue slows down after the collision. At a certain point (offset) the cue and ball wouldn't even care to separate. But even before that, the "wagging" of the end of the cue after its initial deflection to the side would cause it to contact the cueball again. (You can see it come fairly close in some of Dr. Dave's high-speed films.) So even with a chalk that didn't slip no matter how far off-center you cued, you couldn't expect to increase maximum spin too much beyond what can already be had with standard chalk.
At more modest offsets should you expect to see more spin? Well, the premise of my first post was that, generally speaking, slippage doesn't take place. This has been debated in the past, but I think people like Dr. Dave and Bob Jewett would agree. (One or two of Dr. Dave's high-speed closeups do seem to show some initial slippage at first contact, but others don't. I very much doubt that this is typical.) Assuming essentially zero slippage then, you'll get the same spin and subsequent swerve regardless of the chalk.
Jim
I think it might take the tip a little time to "set up" on the cue ball and you might consider that slipping, but for the most part there is no real slip and the claim the OP refers to was, in my opinion, worthless marketing hype.
A similar phenomenon to slippage is seen in the high-speed color video from Austria in which a Moori is seen to seriously deform during contact. That kind of deformation is more difficult to analyze and I don't think anyone has. I suspect that tip deformation has the possibility of reducing squirt.