Please allow me time to get some pics posted of exactly what I'm talking about. I'll head to the hall tonight and set this up.View attachment 762670heres a quick scribble of what I'm talking about. I'm headed for the hall later and will take some pics that will be accurate and to scale. Apologies, but this will have to suffice until then
Your description has been clear from the beginning - it's simply not "mathematically precise". It can be pretty close for straighter shots, but farther off for greater cuts. Of course an aiming system doesn't have to be mathematically precise in order to work for you - you can learn to “see” it as needed.View attachment 762670heres a quick scribble of what I'm talking about. I'm headed for the hall later and will take some pics that will be accurate and to scale. Apologies, but this will have to suffice until then.
Your aim points cannot connect is the rebuttal point. What's working has to be you adjusting to the correct alignment.Please allow me time to get some pics posted of exactly what I'm talking about. I'll head to the hall tonight and set this up.
I apologize for not doing this to begin with. Just bcuz I understand it completely doesn't mean others will, considering all the incorrect comparison/assumptions I see. Obviously my description must have been terrible. I will fix that. My aim points are mathematically correct.
Your aim points cannot connect is the rebuttal point. What's working has to be you adjusting to the correct alignm
I have placed pieces of black tape on the balls where the lines mark. As long as those 2 points are combined, the shot goes. You can see how the lines go to the outer part of each ball. The shot line of course is the center line.View attachment 762670heres a quick scribble of what I'm talking about. I'm headed for the hall later and will take some pics that will be accurate and to scale. Apologies, but this will have to suffice until then.
Don't knock this unless you've tried it on a table. Critiquing by a drawing isn't gonna help anyone. Just try it. You'll see what I mean and like it.I have placed pieces of black tape on the balls where the lines mark. As long as those 2 points are combined, the shot goes. You can see how the lines go to the outer part of each ball. The shot line of course is the center line.
I don't know how to explain it any better than that. There's no compensation or any of that. It's a perfect point on each ball. Hope this helps. If it still doesn't make sense or work for you, my apologies. Was only trying to help.
For those of you who get this and/or have tried it, use it w my blessing. It will increase your pocketing % overnight. Imo, the easiest, most accurate system out there. Take what you can use and leave the rest. lol.Don't knock this unless you've tried it on a table. Critiquing by a drawing isn't gonna help anyone. Just try it. You'll see what I mean and like it.
That's all I can say.
I think you are confusing not understanding with just thinking it's wrong.For those of you who get this and/or have tried it, use it w my blessing. It will increase your pocketing % overnight. Imo, the easiest, most accurate system out there. Take what you can use and leave the rest. lol.
I'm not a very good teacher and wish I would have prepared this better B4 posting, but it was a spur of the moment thing for me. I was surprised at all the confusion and misinterpretation of what is a very simple concept... 2 lines, 2 points. Put em together and pocket the ball. Simple. I can't put it any better than that.
Perhaps this is a good example of why old dawgs don't give away their tips and secrets. Some people won't believe anything and others simply want to criticize. I'm not forcing this on anyone. Use it or lose it. Whatever works for you.
Taking a look at this, I see lots of inside english. This will deflect the rock into compliance.I have placed pieces of black tape on the balls where the lines mark. As long as those 2 points are combined, the shot goes. You can see how the lines go to the outer part of each ball. The shot line of course is the center line.
I don't know how to explain it any better than that. There's no compensation or any of that. It's a perfect point on each ball. Hope this helps. If it still doesn't make sense or work for you, my apologies. Was only trying to help.
joe's system does not use this method to match the contact pointsThere is a separate section for "aiming systems", this one is already well known. Joe tucker has a video talking about this contact point of lining up and also sold a set of balls made to line up the numbers (locations) of the two balls.
This is how I see it as well. In the drawing in post number 1 of this thread, contact point to contact point will result in a too-fat hit on the shot to the side pocket. It still might go at that distance but I don’t see that happening with more distance between the OB and the pocket.Also in terms of why this is geometrically inaccurate, I made these drawings illustrating a back cut. I made the ghost ball (with contact point) literally by copy/pasting the cueball and moving the circle/star until they aligned with the object ball's contact point. The alignments overlap, meaning these two points cannot line up on this shot. The cueball will contact the object ball before those "assumed contact points" get a chance to meet up.
View attachment 762730
And I can simulate where by copying another ghost ball and moving it back (keeping the original assumed contact points in alignment) until the ghost ball intersects the object ball with no overlap. Then I unearth where the actual contact point will occur (yellow star)
View attachment 762731
This is a good depiction of the equatorial ellipse which allows you to see the contact point on the cue ball.
How could there ever be unequal amounts of overlap? Your brain already has to adjust to see equal overlap since one ball is closer than the other, but two things overlapping each other - how could it overlap more one way than the other?At the end of the day we're discussing a visualization process to achieve contact-point-to-contact-point alignment. There are multiple ways to approach this.
So another interesting tidbit is that when you're down on the shot (if your vision center is correct), centered at the contact point you should see an equal amount of the object ball overlap that contact-point to the right as you see cueball overlap that contact-point to the left. (Some people aim using equal overlap entirely).
You can visualize the shot similar to Mosconi’s parallel lines approach. This is what it looks like in my mind when I’m standing.
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And this is what it looks like when you're down.
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Talking about Mosconi's parallel line approach, when you get down on the shot it should also look like this (equal overlap)...
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And like this when you're down on the shot.
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It would be interesting if Mensabum finds that equal overlap visualization also manifests with his approach. And if it does, I wonder if that's the missing ingredient in terms of an non-deliberate adjustment that may be occurring when getting down.
Looking at where the black tape is on the cue ball, it's clearly not at the point where a line from the pocket through the center of the cue ball would land. And I think that's what most people understood you to be saying.I have placed pieces of black tape on the balls where the lines mark.
How could there ever be unequal amounts of overlap? Your brain already has to adjust to see equal overlap since one ball is closer than the other, but two things overlapping each other - how could it overlap more one way than the other?