In that exhibition, in was on the first try!I think the archer's familiarity with the arrow is important.
Pretty quickly, I'm sure.
pj
chgo
In that exhibition, in was on the first try!I think the archer's familiarity with the arrow is important.
Pretty quickly, I'm sure.
pj
chgo
First try ever with that shaft?In that exhibition, in was on the first try!
First try under fire with 300 spectators!First try ever with that shaft?
pj
chgo
Great shootin'.First try under fire with 300 spectators!
BTW, I have 2 shafts. I just grab one and go to work.
NEVER!!! Just clean balls with soap/water/vacuumed table.Great shootin'.
Do you mind if I ask whether you prep the table or balls before an exhibition? No judgement, just curiosity.
pj
chgo
Like I figured. Thanks.NEVER!!! Just clean balls with soap/water/vacuumed table.
It's Not he Arrow, it's the Archer. I could grab one off the rack and get the same results.
Only needs a decent tip.
That cue I played with then was solid BEM butt Carom cue, 12mm tip and 18.3oz, made by John Guffey of Oklahoma City. It was a gift from him which may have been retail $200. I couldn't have hit the shot Any Better with a 2K cue! Or do "I" need it to execute.You may want to tell that to all the sports scientists and teams that spend hundreds of thousands if not millions on developing things like a 1 oz lighter shoe for running or a car with another 2% less drag or lift. It is 100% the arrow, combined with the user. You are not going to see Olympic archers using a $50 WalMart bow, the equipment level will match the skill, and basically HAS to for the top performers to compete against each other. If a pro is playing some amateur, they can beat them with anything, but pro vs pro is a different story, or any even level going aginst the other. It's nothing that is not brought up just about every week LOL
You may be able to execute some shot with any cue, but if you are facing 10 players as good as you are, you are not going to go out and pick some $30 generic thing to use when they are using their normal equipment.
You may want to tell that to all the sports scientists and teams that spend hundreds of thousands if not millions on developing things like a 1 oz lighter shoe for running or a car with another 2% less drag or lift. It is 100% the arrow, combined with the user. You are not going to see Olympic archers using a $50 WalMart bow, the equipment level will match the skill, and basically HAS to for the top performers to compete against each other. If a pro is playing some amateur, they can beat them with anything, but pro vs pro is a different story, or any even level going aginst the other. It's nothing that is not brought up just about every week LOL
You may be able to execute some shot with any cue, but if you are facing 10 players as good as you are, you are not going to go out and pick some $30 generic thing to use when they are using their normal equipment.
I’d like to say thank you for having an open consideration. I see a lot of assumptions from the rest of the crowd.You may want to tell that to all the sports scientists and teams that spend hundreds of thousands if not millions on developing things like a 1 oz lighter shoe for running or a car with another 2% less drag or lift. It is 100% the arrow, combined with the user. You are not going to see Olympic archers using a $50 WalMart bow, the equipment level will match the skill, and basically HAS to for the top performers to compete against each other. If a pro is playing some amateur, they can beat them with anything, but pro vs pro is a different story, or any even level going aginst the other. It's nothing that is not brought up just about every week LOL
You may be able to execute some shot with any cue, but if you are facing 10 players as good as you are, you are not going to go out and pick some $30 generic thing to use when they are using their normal equipment.
I’m looking for any kind of test results etc that would show the relationship between shaft stiffness and overall CB velocity. I’m curious how marginal or significant stiffer woods with more compression strength will perform compared to maple. Anyone?
Even a conical vs pro taper test would be a starting point. What is really like is Purple Heart vs maple, or Lily us vs maple at otherwise equal specifications.
You'd get the same effect by hitting just a little harder.It was proven to me that you can get a bit more side spin with carbon--- if you hit the cue ball with a wood ld using the same stroke and the same 1 tip of side spin by shooting at the same location you do with a carbon fiber shaft==stiffness.---
The analysis of where to hit the cue ball for maximum travel with minimum cue stick speed was analyzed a long time ago by Coriolis and more recently (in English) by Ron Shepard. It turns out that you want to hit the ball at about 61% of its height for maximum distance assuming the cue ball will be rolling before it hits a cushion. That's where you want to hit lag shots. I'm sure that Dr. Dave has the analysis on his site.
The formula relating ball speed to stick speed and including stick weight is in one of Byrne's books (I think in the chapter on picking a break stick) and also on Dr. Dave's site. It is high school level physics.
The largest factor in the efficiency of a cue -- how close the ball speed is to the ideal speed mentioned above -- seems to be the tip. That is why break tips are often phenolic. Phenolic loses less energy than leather.
Dr Dave does tests and he shows like a 1" deflection using a Revo, when I shot it with my test I show it having almost no deflection.
Need a machine, and agreed upon testing that only tests the specific thing without any secondary variables added in.
If you want to test the efficiency of a cue stick, here is a relatively simple experiment:
Find a very hard floor like concrete or maybe you can find a steel I-beam exposed somewhere.
Hold the stick tip down towards the floor at a known distance, like two feet.
Drop the stick straight down. (Don't let it twist as it falls.)
Measure how high it bounces.
The ratio of bounce height to drop height gives you the efficiency of the stick.
Some energy may be lost in the floor if it is not perfectly solid, but this test will still let you compare sticks.
For the measurement, you could video record the tip with a ruler behind the cue.
Bob:That is false. Adding sidespin does not increase the forward travel. It can help if you contact cushions but then the side spin is converted into speed. A ball struck off-center has less initial speed than a ball struck in the center.
The analysis of where to hit the cue ball for maximum travel with minimum cue stick speed was analyzed a long time ago by Coriolis and more recently (in English) by Ron Shepard. It turns out that you want to hit the ball at about 61% of its height for maximum distance assuming the cue ball will be rolling before it hits a cushion. That's where you want to hit lag shots. I'm sure that Dr. Dave has the analysis on his site.
That is false. Adding sidespin does not increase the forward travel. It can help if you contact cushions but then the side spin is converted into speed. A ball struck off-center has less initial speed than a ball struck in the center.
The analysis of where to hit the cue ball for maximum travel with minimum cue stick speed was analyzed a long time ago by Coriolis and more recently (in English) by Ron Shepard. It turns out that you want to hit the ball at about 61% of its height for maximum distance assuming the cue ball will be rolling before it hits a cushion. That's where you want to hit lag shots. I'm sure that Dr. Dave has the analysis on his site.
Bob:
Notice that Dr. Dave confirms my statement in his new video "Common side spin Myths debunked" at time=7:20
I'm not sure what you think I am confirming, but I agree with everything Bob wrote above. Running sidespin does help the CB retain speed (i.e., not lose as much as normal) off cushions. Here are analyses backing up the things Bob says above:
And for those interested, here is the video you mentioned:
- TP A.30 – The effects of cue tip offset, cue weight, and cue speed on cue ball speed and spin
- TP B.12 – Optimal tip height for speed/distance control
A more complete version of what I said is:Bob wrote:: That is false. Adding sidespin does not increase the forward travel.
Dr. Dave writes: Running sidespin does help the CB retain speed (i.e., not lose as much as normal) off cushions.
See how these are in disagreement.
The side spin does not make the cue ball travel farther unless there is cushion contact.Consider:: If you hit the CB with maximum sidespin and medium speed, after a few inches, the CB is traveling in a straight line while rotating at a 45º angle with respect to the direction of travel. In this orientation the CB ahs SQRT(2) = 1.414× as much angular momentum as a CB would have when hit on the vertical centerline of the shot. Thus, it will travel farther due entirely to angular momentum.