I was watching TAR17 and Corey mentioned that they had run a test about the cause of skid (aka "kick" in the snooker world) and determined that it was static electricity.
A few guys on these forums also mentioned the idea but at the time I was skeptical.
One post I read on here says that a physicist in a BBC documentary tested the theory to see if it's either dirty balls OR static. His result was apparently that it was neither, but the poster didn't remember how they disproved static. He did remember that they cleaned the hell out of the balls with ethanol and shot with an unchalked tip to disprove dirt... even with these conditions the ball eventually kicked.
The latest theory was it has something to do with the oils used to create the balls. I guess some property of the (petroleum-based?) plastic resin maybe causes it to get funny patches. Or it 'sweats'? I didn't quite follow.
So was corey talking about the same BBC documentary I wonder? Or something more recent? Either he or the poster were misremembering the conclusions.
Static might explain why some people swear it happens on some types of cloth more than others.
A few guys on these forums also mentioned the idea but at the time I was skeptical.
One post I read on here says that a physicist in a BBC documentary tested the theory to see if it's either dirty balls OR static. His result was apparently that it was neither, but the poster didn't remember how they disproved static. He did remember that they cleaned the hell out of the balls with ethanol and shot with an unchalked tip to disprove dirt... even with these conditions the ball eventually kicked.
The latest theory was it has something to do with the oils used to create the balls. I guess some property of the (petroleum-based?) plastic resin maybe causes it to get funny patches. Or it 'sweats'? I didn't quite follow.
So was corey talking about the same BBC documentary I wonder? Or something more recent? Either he or the poster were misremembering the conclusions.
Static might explain why some people swear it happens on some types of cloth more than others.