StevenPWaldon said:The most hysterical thing? Both rooms have Ernesto maintain the tables, and to the same specs. Yet the players would ignore this fact.
Now that is funny!
Ray
StevenPWaldon said:The most hysterical thing? Both rooms have Ernesto maintain the tables, and to the same specs. Yet the players would ignore this fact.
BigCat said:IIRC, pockets are customarily measured at the gate, not the drop. Where did you take the measurement on that table?
Ray
StevenPWaldon said:I have been wondering this a while, since everyone plays on different equipment : What are AZBers notions of what constitutes a tight pocket? It seems like every joint has a few tables that are tight pocket tables, but a tight pocket in one pool hall might be considered a bucket in another. Opinions?
Here's a photo of one of the pockets at my local joint. They measure a hair under 4". Anyone have a tighter table you play on?
teebee said:Tight pockets arn't bad if the pocket shelf is not too deep and the rail angles are right. The wrong combination of these three variables can make a table unplayable. A friend of mine had a no name table with 4.75" pockets that would spit out any thing that touched the rail. There was no such thing as pocket speed and the sweetest run down the rail would rattle.
socks said:you mean that table over next the the entrance door next to where they put that coin table? i think thats a brunswick. that thing has nasty tight pockets.
for everyone else, by poolroom, i think he means marietta billiard club that johny and kim own now.
also olhausen's have that deep shelf like diamonds that make the pockets alittle hard to play.
tjlmbklr said:This answers my question about my tables pockets. Any idea what is a deep shelf and what is standard?
WPA Website said:http://www.wpa-pool.com/index.asp?content=rules_spec
9. Pocket Openings and Measurements
Shelf: The shelf is measured from the center of the imaginary line that goes from one side of the mouth to the other - where the nose of the cushion changes direction - to the vertical cut of the slate pocket cut. Shelf includes bevel.
Corner Pocket Shelf: between 1 [2.54 cm] and 2.25 inches [5.715 cm]
Side Pocket Shelf: between 0 and .375 inches [.9525 cm]
socks said:you mean that table over next the the entrance door next to where they put that coin table? i think thats a brunswick. that thing has nasty tight pockets.
for everyone else, by poolroom, i think he means marietta billiard club that johny and kim own now.
QUOTE]
the table by the door across from the billiard control desk WAS a Gandy they sold 2 of them off, kim told me about that. Now the table there is a Olhausen from Johnnys house, he had it at home for 3 or 4 years, last I heard its for sale, the skirts are custom for Johnny with scorpions engraved etc on it. it isnt my business to say how much etc. there is an empty space next to johnnys table.
the toughest table there is table 4 it is brutal, its kims and Johnnys favorite table, Johnny offered SVB to play there-no word yet on the match, it would be great and I hope its gonna happen, SVB is NOT dodging him its just a schedual thing, i believe the game will happen and will be close, I dont know who is gonna win that game.
I dont like 4" pockets, I like bigger pockets I can cheat the pocket with and build angles. 4 5/8" is cool, 5.25" is just too big and sloppy.
Hollywood Billiards tables are brutal, Ernesto did them all at around 4" with 45 degree pocket facings which makes them even tougher, 53 degrees is the standars Burnswick measurement(to the best of my recollation) Also the room had a open wood sand blasted roof(exactly the same as my house) and open brick walls(not like my house) and its humid in there often(like my house) they keep the doors open most of the time and that area is a humid area anyway, in LA some areas have dryer air than others, hollywood billiards isnt in a dry area, the 101 freeway between the 2 valleys runs is right next to it. I couldnt figure it out for the longest time why the tables are so wet there then I noticed the ceiling-same as mine and my house is awalys wet, so that got me interested, unsealed brick holds water, the area is wet, so the tables there are wet, and being as tough as they are there is no shot at running a 5 pack. I think I heard the most racks run at the Swanee 2 weeks ago was 3, Its a great room, go anywhere else and its easy to play. their food is also the best of any pool room ever, its all homemade-I have been in the kitchen, not a microwave heat and eat joint.
StevenPWaldon said:Wow. That's insanely deep.
tjlmbklr said:Sounds like my Olhausen. It was tough for me too pull the trigger in my decision to tighten them to 4.5"
I didn't see this before my last post. Did you shim or did you add to the subrail and replace the rubber? We also call it the "Olhausen Rattle". It's amazing how little the shot is off before it happens. Don't even think of kissing the rail with speed.av84fun said:DON'T change them! I have an Ohlausen with 4.75 corners but DEEP shelves. Not as deep as yours but deep. In addition, the facing pads are pretty hard....SO, the pockets spit out a LOT of shots like you wouldn't believe.
It's called the Olhausen Rattle and people who I have over to play just can't get used to that issue and rattle plenty of shots!!!
(-:
Fatboy said:socks said:you mean that table over next the the entrance door next to where they put that coin table? i think thats a brunswick. that thing has nasty tight pockets.
for everyone else, by poolroom, i think he means marietta billiard club that johny and kim own now.
the table by the door across from the billiard control desk WAS a Gandy they sold 2 of them off, kim told me about that. Now the table there is a Olhausen from Johnnys house, he had it at home for 3 or 4 years, last I heard its for sale, the skirts are custom for Johnny with scorpions engraved etc on it. it isnt my business to say how much etc. there is an empty space next to johnnys table.
the toughest table there is table 4 it is brutal, its kims and Johnnys favorite table, Johnny offered SVB to play there-no word yet on the match, it would be great and I hope its gonna happen, SVB is NOT dodging him its just a schedual thing, i believe the game will happen and will be close, I dont know who is gonna win that game.
chevybob20 said:How did it play after you tightened the pockets? Did you extend the subrails? I'm starting to lean toward reducing mine to 4.5 inches. I know that my Olhausen will reject balls with the same frequency as the 4.5 inch Diamond table at the pool hall. I'm afraid it would make the table unplayable. The shelf on my Olhausen is deeper than the Diamond. I measured them with a buddy after a discussion on why my table plays so tough with 5" pockets. We measured all the table brands we could find in town.
StevenPWaldon said:It's true. A lot of good places in California have nice tight pockets.
Funny story: I knew a regular at Hollywood Billiards who preferred to play one-pocket. However, the action there was dismal at best. All the real one-pocket action was in Santa Monica at the House of Billiards. He went once and lost, or maybe broke even at best. He never returned. When I asked why he wouldn't go back, he complained night and day about the buckets for pockets, rails that slide, the damp Santa Monica air, and how anybody can make a ball on those tables. After all, Hollywood Billiards has the tightest tables!
Now, I started playing pool at the House of Billiards in Santa Monica. When I moved to West Hollywood and became friend with the management at Hollywood Billiards, I made that my new home. And I realized they had the identically cut/shaped pockets.
So on my next trip to the House of Billiards I'm talking with some of the rail birds about this guy, and pocket sizes. And when I mention that Hollywood Billiards has tight pocket tables as well, not a *single* one of them would acknowledge it. They all claimed Hollywood has buckets for pockets, and nothing is tighter than tables 11-13 at House of Billiards.
The most hysterical thing? Both rooms have Ernesto maintain the tables, and to the same specs. Yet the players would ignore this fact.
Remembering those conversations is actually what made me post. Not only do people have differing views of what is tight, but when two tables are cut identically they still have to argue!