Pete, Pete, Pete. You're the person that is making me break my Lenten fast of not posting a single post until Easter. I tried my best to resist, but the temptation of this thread is far too great...
I've been following this entire thread very closely, and your arguments are both wrong and grossly inconsistent.
pete lafond said:
What happens with side spin is that the combination of the spin plus the friction of the felt in front of the OB ball causes the OB to twist. The OB gets thrown forward with this twist which now has top right or top left English spin on it.
You make sense in this post, but for arguments sake don't jumble the two together. Keep them separate, because the friction of the felt and the side spin of the CB affect the OB on two different axes. The side spin of the CB imparts side spin on the OB, which rotates the OB about the vertical axis. The friction of the felt imparts roll on the OB, which rotates the OB about the horizontal axis. Like you said, the resulting "twist" is just the combination of these two effects.
If you take away the friction component of the felt (as the Calc has previously mentioned), all you have left is a moving OB with pure side spin (imagine hitting balls on a blanket of ice). So back to the original question...does side spin on the CB transfer side spin on the OB. The answer is YES! The twist you're talking about is just the result of adding another spin component about another axis.
If you still argue that the felt is a "major contributor" to your argument that side spin does NOT get transferred to the OB, then how can you justify saying that...
pete lafond said:
In my original statement, I stated that a CB spinning sideways does not cause the OB to spin sideways. Only the rails and balls hit at an angle can cause this (this is why cross banks work).
pete lafond said:
So as I stated the only way the CB can cause an OB to spin left or right is through contact on an angle.
These statements are grossly inconsistent to your previous arguments. How can these cases (collision induced spin) be any different than the case we have been talking about? The OB is still traveling on the same friction-full felt, so wouldn't the OB eventually start to twist if you give the felt enough time to grab? So shouldn't you argue that because of twist, side spin cannot be transferred to the OB in ANY case?
Just think of hitting a soft cut shot on a striped ball, with the stripe oriented horizontally. From your arguments, the cut angle DOES indeed impart side spin on the OB. But the OB won't spin like a top all the way to the pocket. The felt will eventually grab the OB and the it will have a rolling component on top of the (very) slight sideways spin. By looking at the eventual twist of the OB, can you still argue that the CB imparted side spin on the OB? To be consisted with your previous arguments, I hope you answer no.
So neither can a cue impart side spin to the CB, since the CB will eventually twist once the felt has time to grab hold of it. Hence from your arguments, absolutely nothing can impart side spin on the OB. Do you see where I'm getting at?