Jeff - in looking at some of your solutions I think you tend to shoot table length shots more than you need to. Do you play on an 8 foot table? In your sequence in this layout, you shoot the 8 uptable, and then shoot a pretty tough shot on the 3. I shoot the same shot on the 3, but the cue ball is just over a diamond length from the 3, and it should be pretty easy to get straight in on the 3.
The reason I'm giving you a hard time about this is because I believe these kinds of shots should be thought of as last options. Now in these very wide open table layouts, you might have to shoot more of them. However I'm pretty comfortable in being able to execute all the shots in my sequence, and I have reasonable "plan B's" if I get a little out of line.
When I moved back to NJ from Houston, my father kept telling me my patterns looked more like a 9 ball player than 14.1. (I was playing more 9 ball then). I wasn't fully sure what he meant, but 5 or 10 years later I understand the difference.
I've mentioned this before, maybe not in this forum, but it is an observation I made after a session with Jim Rempe some time ago. We ran through through some racks, and he told me before each shot what he would do and why, and then I'd shoot it. What I learned what that he was much more willing to go for a more difficult cue ball position and end up with a simple object ball, rather than taking a simple position route have having to shoot a more difficult object ball. Of course what looks like difficult position to one person is simple to another once you understand where the cue ball is going more accurately. (As a side note, of course, the goal is to have easy position plays AND easy object balls, but you can't always have both).
Anyway, not to beat a dead horse, but I thought you might find that perspective from a classic 14.1 player interesting. It would be great if some of the top guns in here would comment when they get back in town...oh wait, Bob Jewett is here. Maybe he'll have a different perspective...