cloth
jazznpool said:
If its not pulled very tight to the bed 860 can play on the slow side. (Played recently in a Detroit area room where tables are set up with loose Simonis 860). Slow cloth and dull rails can make position play a nightmare. Lively rails with worn, fast cloth presents speed judgement/control problems. If I couldn't have moderate conditions, I'd rather deal with too fast than too slow. I also prefer 4-3/8" to 4-1/2" pockets. Smaller pockets are too retrictive for most games and takes too much shooting and position play (and fun) out of games. At the end of the day we have to cope with whatever the conditions are the best we can. Some are better than others at this.
While I'm at it I might as well add that I hate underweight and undersized cue balls. They drastically change cut and carom angles. Using follow or force follow becomes a joke. Takes a lot of fun and skill out of the game. Despite feedback from good players the owner of a fairly nice local room (who plays at about a C level) insists on the light cueballs. I think he gets his jollies on being able to draw the cueball like crazy. It really bastardizes a great game.
Martin
Hi Martin,
If any cloth is not installed properly it will be slow.
I use a grid system to stretch cloth.
I've written about this a ways back.
I lay the cloth on the slates, then using a chalk line with white chalk, snap two lines, 2" apart down the middle long ways on the cloth. Then I snap 2 lines on each end and 2 lines at the side pockets. Make sure the lines are 2" apart.The 2 lines on each end should be about 6" from the end of the slates.
[ your snapping a total of 8 lines, 2 in each location].
I then staple about 6" in the center on the one end and go to the other end and staple about 12", then go back and forth from end to end, stapling about 4" at each time on each end until your all the way across both ends.
{ BYW, table mechanics don't like this method, because it's to much work and take about 10 minutes longer than normal}.
Do your best to keep the cross ways lines straight as possible, and the same width apart. Now stretch the cloth side ways, starting just next to the side pockets, working from side to side as you did for the ends, then come back and stretch for all your pockets. By using this method, you will not have any hot spots or slow spots any place in the cloth.
Most table guys, just staple one end at a time, and then staple the other end. By doing it that way, the first end will never be as tight as the last end he stretches.This will make his first end slow, over time.
Also if your doing many table at the same time, you have a [bench mark] for stretching the cloth, meaning two or 3 guys can work on differant tables and using this method, all the cloth will be stretched the same.
After stretching the first table, measure the distance between the lines and tell your other mechanics to stretch there's the same.
Now all the tables will play very close to the same.
This same method I used on the pro-tour for years. The PRO'S really liked how the tables played. Never had ANY complaints, for 12 yrs or so.
Don't worry about the white chalk lines, they brush out easily.
hanger guys, just a hanger.
rock-on
da-blud