OK, now this response raises yet another question, being,,,,,,
Is it harder to pot American Snooker balls on an American Snooker table, than it is to pot English Snooker Balls on an English Snooker table?
Do most american snooker table/rooms, use 2 1/8" balls, instead of the smaller 2 1/16"balls the english use, therefore making the pockets effectively 1/16" tighter?
Yes, yes, and it's a lot more than 1/16" tighter.
Some clairification(s).
The English/International game is played on a "Billiard" table.
Unless things have changed for the worse, only us colonials use the term
"Snooker table" to describe the table Snooker is played on.
American tables do have smaller pockets, but it is the severe rounding
of the cushions to form the opening that makes all the difference.
As a rule of thumb, with no actual hard data to back it up, consider a typical shot,
shooting the Black<7 ball> off its spot from a comfortable
distance at an angle requiring the infamous half-ball-hit.
Factoring in the effective pocket size, larger ball, and pocket geometry,
That pot on an American 5 x 10 is about twice as difficult as on
an English 6 x 12. Just for fun, think about how hard the game was
when there were many 6 x 12 American style tables in the larger cities
of America. Shooting the Pink<6 ball> off its spot from within the D,
roughly equivalent to a 'spot shot' in pool, was enough to make a strong man weep.
Sadly, the strictly American version of the game has all but disapeared.
A distressingly high percentage of the tables available for public use
have been bastardized to 2 1/4 inch corner pockets to play
the vile "golf" and/or "indemnity/insurance". An act that IMHO should
be a felony.
Dale