Patrick Johnson said:
If you aim outside the miscue limit, that would be too low.
pj
chgo
Actually, pretty hard to do given how low it is on the CB but the point of this post is to announce a shocking discovery that this thread prompted me to make.
First, I have a plenty sporty enough draw stroke and I spend virtually ZERO time practicing a super-power draw because the need for it comes up so infrequently in actual play.
Rather, I spend a LOT of time practicing 3 in. up to 3 diamond distance control because those distances come up constantly.
I also spend SOME time on 2 rail draws over 5-6 diamonds but you don't need a power draw to accomplish that.
But here's what I found...and it really blew my mind after all these years.
I used a wide stripe for a CB because the lower edge of the stripe is the miscue limit.
The ball I used has a slight scratch under one of the 9s so there was no doubt which side of the ball the tip struck.
My intended contact point placed the center of the tip (dime radius) slightly below the stripe...which is REALLY low...because I know that the upper portion of the tip...not the center...is what is going to contact the CB.
But I was SHOCKED to see that the chalk patch was all the way up to the lower extremity of the white circle surrounding the 9 (Super Aramith Pro) and that is a QUARTER INCH above my intended contact point!
That means that all this time...on hard draws...I must be dropping my elbow or doing something else goofy to cause the tip to rise above my aim point.
I could have lost a LOT of money betting that the contact point would be well below where it was.
I'm working on a remedy (where are ya when I need ya Scott Lee!!) (-:
But to get bottom of the stripe contact it feels as though I am RAISING my elbow...or at least it feels like a definite downward thrust just before contact and when I do that, the patch is found with its lower extremity right exactly AT the bottom of the stripe and the CB screws back significantly further.
Now I'm going to have to be careful not to over-crank my draws.
I was really stunned by this finding so I just thought I would share.
Regards,
Jim