This is exactly what I'm talking about. Please then show us what a true swipe stroke is.
As described, my analysis says it can't be done. I look forward to refutations involving actual video footage, with chalk marks on cue balls.
Thank you kindly.
This is exactly what I'm talking about. Please then show us what a true swipe stroke is.
Here's another:
3.) The most spin that can be transferred from the CB to an OB with a normal shot is: 35.71% (per TP A.27). For more info and demonstrations, see the spin transfer resource page.
^^^^^^666^^^^^^^^^^^^
Your namesake please?
Funny, but that does show my lack of 'typing' skills.
I was just quickly hold the place so as not have to not quote the large diagram.
An off center hit basically has two force vectors being applied to the ball. Please think about that.
Yes... IF the two force vectors can be matched by two different strokes then the results would be the same.
Why do you think a top level player would use a different stroke for a certain situation?
and for a second I thought I was being called a Satanist.
There are shots that come up, but since you don't use much spin other than what one can get from missing center while trying to hit center, you would not even know what they are or what the intentions are.
You would probably play safe.
Like Fran Crimi said, 'Happy Experimenting'.
I don't usually converse with people that hate me & call me an idiot.
The need will arise for you & you won't recognize it & you too will probably play safe or foul or something other than use what you've experimented with & found useful.
What rational individual takes the time & effort to personally go back & individually 'erase' 9,000 of their own posts so that they can punish the members of the forum for not taking him seriously?
I'll leave it to the majority of the readership to make that determination.
In case you or another has not noticed....
I'm the one making the EVEN numbered posts, which means that I am responding & have NOT initiated anything.
The stalker is the one doing the initiating.
Actually, all hits, whether off center or not, have only 1 force. The concept of vectors is a mathematical construct to describe the force and analyze it mathematically. The "component" vectors are just that...a component of the force. There is a component force in an infinity of directions, people just don't care about most of those directions for the mathematical models we use. There is a force *down* towards the table bed on above center hits. There is an upward force component on below center hits, etc.
To talk about "matching" one of these vectors illustrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the concept of vectors. The "vectors" are not real forces, they are results that can be isolated mathematically from the one actual force. Any hit on the cueball has a whole pile of potential vectors you could look at. So any attempt to "match" one of the vectors with a stroke will instead result in a different pile of vectors, rather than only the one you are trying to "match".
I do not disagree that the direction of the cue tip at contact can alter the net force on the cue ball by altering 1 or many of the various vectors you could look at. I just think it is not accurate to talk about "matching" a particular vector. Math and physics is great, but it isn't reality. It is a representation of reality.
Food for thought, since we are "thinking about this".
KMRUNOUT
Whatever the angle of motion might be during that moment of contact, wouldn't it be easier and more consistent to simply stroke at that angle without the swoop?Please correct me if I’m wrong, for this discussion, swoop or swipe is being used to define a lateral movement of the tip at moment of impact. If that is correct, please continue.
How much lateral movement is happening in the .001-.002 seconds that the tip is in contact with the CB? I get a lateral swipe at the ball with my hand will certainly generate more spin than if I hit it direct on but a slap motion at the cue is significantly more lateral movement than forward.
In thinking of how much lateral movement on the tip would be necessary to create additional English, I think of apparent wind. If the actual wind is at 5 mph and from the west and I’m traveling in a car driving north at 45mph, the apparent wind altered approx 80 degrees to the North.
With a swoop stroke, how much lateral compared to forward are you stating takes place? I did a little math and for every mph you’re stroking the cue, the amount of distance the cueball travels while in contact with the tip is .0176 of an inch per MPH of the stroke if in contact for .001 seconds (obviously double if in contact for .002)
Example shot of 8 MPH - the distance during contact between tip and cue ball is between .1408 and .2816 of an inch. If an 8 mph stroke, in that time how much lateral movement do you think is possible? The same 8mph rate? Would that not create a 'path of travel' at 45 degrees? Should be easy to see in slow motion. Contact to center or to the side of the swoop direction would be moving the tip away from contacting the ball. Moving away, the tip friction doesn’t seem like it would be enough to impart extra English if moving away from the contact, certainly not maintain any level of accuracy. Forward force at any speed is more significantly forward than lateral or the cue ball would not move forward.
While I respect that there is belief a swoop does create more English, I’d like to see proof, with video, that a cue tip is traveling laterally at moment of impact because while people are professing this as laws of physics, most things in physics can be proven. We're not there yet - plenty of opinions though.
I offer my current opinion: I think 'swoop' is either placebo or a “Jim Furyk” in that you’re seeing an odd swing, but its square and true on impact.
Last point, I’d call a foul anyway, you need to contact the cueball in a stroking motion, not a swooping one.:wink:
ps - English, my answer is "yes I have"
Rick,How many in your 'testing' would you term to have been a true swipe or swoop stroke, as Fran defined it?I hadn't until you pointed it out. FYI, here's my reply.
...
It's this type of 'testing' & the forming of a 'conclusion' that is misleading.
That is correct. From the shooter's perspective (and from the mark on the CB), the "actual" tip offset (as indicated by the distance between the dotted line and CB center in the diagram below) is smaller than the "effective" tip offset of the shot (shown with the purple-arrowed line in the diagram).Dave, when you say "The swoop stroke can create the same amount of spin with less actual tip offset from center"... by "actual tip offset from center" I assume you mean "center" as seen from the direction the cue is pointed, despite the fact that the effective tip offset from center is as seen looking along the OB's path. Is that right?
Excellent point and suggestion. By "actual," I mean as perceived (by the shooter and as shown by the chalk mark on the CB).My point is that calling that "ineffective" tip offset the "actual" tip offset might help perpetuate the myth that you can get more spin with a swoop stroke than with a straight stroke. I suggest calling it the "perceived" tip offset (or something like that) instead, to indicate clearly that it isn't the one that matters for this comparison.
I agree. I've done the best I can in the diagram and with my explanations and demonstrations in the article and video, but maybe we can come up with something better.The difference between "perceived" and "effective" tip offset can be hard to visualize and grasp - many don't know a difference even exists - hence the misunderstandings.
Well stated. If people want more info on this topic, see:Low Deflection (LD) doesn't refer to shaft deflection - it refers to OB deflection (squirt), which isn't significantly related to shaft deflection.