Playing 9 ball is it a certain speed and exact location that gives one the best chance to make the wing ball?Is the type of hit on the cb also important?I know this topic has been beat to death but I'm really curious if any of you think a certain speed gives you the best chance at pocketing the wing ball on a perfect rack.
Anthony
This really depends on the rack... -This is the major variable. Where the gaps are determines whether the wing ball will go in naturally or not. If you have the right rack and hit the head ball at the right place the wing ball will go in--> the speed doesn't matter that much. If you hit it harder the balls will have more energy and have a better chance of finding a hole. (obviously)
The contact point on the head ball is more important than how hard you hit it if you are trying to make the wing ball. On a perfect rack the wing ball should be pretty much dead imo.
Dudley
On a good rack is the contact point off center a little or are you trying to hit the one square as you can?
On a good rack is the contact point off center a little or are you trying to hit the one square as you can?
On a good rack is the contact point off center a little or are you trying to hit the one square as you can?
If you're starting from outside the break box, you simply need to hit the one as square as you can. Right in the face. In this pic, I show three angles. All three make the wing ball easily on a perfect rack, if you hit the rack right in the face. You're not trying to hit the 1 at a single point... a wide range of points will get it done. There's tons of room for error.
Within the box, you usually do need to cut. you'd cut to hit any of these points shown. Watch the recent turning stone footage to see the cut break in action. Again this is ONLY necessary when you're forced to break from the box. If you're allowed to put the CB near the rail, then you should do so and just hit the rack square in the face.
Don't get caught up thinking it's some special speed or angle or english, it's not. I promise you, it's the rack. Before I got MBR I was sitting there saying "why can't I do this? I see it go on video like clockwork. But the wing ball keeps hitting high for me". Then I got the magic rack and the first time I tested, hit it ten times in a row. You just need a perfectly tight rack and you're gonna have a hard time getting one with a plastic or wood triangle.
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Regardless of where I break from I try to hit the head ball as full as possible.
On a tight rack it's best from the side. On a looser rack it's best more towards the middle. (this only applies to 9 ball)
The fuller you hit the head ball the more action you get from the balls. You want the cue ball to jump as little as possible. It makes it seem like you hit it with less speed but the balls roll around the table more.
This is my opinion/experience... Others may disagree
Dudley
zpele said:This thread has got me wondering what the average break speed for most people is.
I used to break at about 20mph until I started lifting weights every day. Now I break at about 25mph but it still seems slow to me.
Can you guys post about what speed you break at?
Ha. Knowing about the rack definitely helped me break 9b better, because I learned that how I hit 'em didn't really matter much when it came to making that wing ball.
But it has made my life harder playing 8b and 10b because I know what balls are 'supposed to' go in, but don't often make them.
For 9b, soft break is the nuts. I do maybe 11? 13? mph. You can go even lower.
For the other games, my hard break was 17.5 with a little control.
I got some lessons from Tony Marcino (Tony_in_MD on the forum) and now I can hit 20+, maybe 22-23 if everything's right.
We measured another forum member's break and it was also around 17.5, using a similar arm-only movement.
I'm impressed that working out can actually add a whole 5 mph to the break. That's something I need to look into. 25 mph is a very strong break, you should not feel like that's slow. A lot of guys will tell you shane's 10b break is the best in the world and that's around 24.
Of course the difference is... 24 is his controlled, safe speed for getting the cue ball to just squat there. Whereas 24 may be your "let-er-rip" speed.