Balls shouldnt be "waxed". Cleaned and polished yes... waxed no. So if something was used on the balls out of the ordinary...like armorall etc. then yes they will play differently.
Chuck
Waxed ball play unnaturally and gives an advantage to the player who might be accustomed to balls prepared thusly. Polished is good. Polished will also help a lot to diminish unwanted collisoin based throw.
No its not the same. Anything softer (as in a coat of wax, even microns thin) that the surface of the balls themselves will cause the balls to cling together and throw alot worse. Not to mention the added bonus of collecting dirt and chalk dust faster than a set of unwaxed balls. There are plastic polishes out there that some people use, some are ok, some have a wax like substance that causes issues. A bit of cleaner followed by a good buffing will result in balls that play truer longer.Jim,
I just looked up the words "polish" and "polished" in the dictionary.
Used as a verb, the word polish can mean "to smooth and brighten, as by rubbing" or it can mean "to coat with polish, wax, etc. and make bright or glossy." And used as a noun it can mean "a surface gloss" or it can mean "a substance used for polishing." Now I'm going to make an assumption that one of the substances commonly used for polishing things, is wax, especially since the word wax was used in the definition of the word polish.
I'm sure that you are recommending rubbing only - without the aid of any wax or other substances - in order to attain a "smooth and shiny surface" (as my dictionary defines the word "polished"), but my question is, does it really make a difference whether you do or don't use wax? Isn't smooth and shiny, still smooth and shiny, whichever way you come by it?
Roger
Good question Roger.This subject has always been interesting to me. If you put something like wax or silicone oil on the balls, they will indeed "play differently," and that's because the friction factor will be greatly decreased. But is that a bad thing? If you decrease the friction, you also decrease the throw - a common problem on cut shots.
Cue builders offer shafts that are designed to decrease cue ball deflection (squirt), so it can be said that those cues play differently from regular cues. Well, if it's okay to modify cues to ease one problem, why is it not okay to modify balls to ease another problem?
Just curious.
Roger
This subject has always been interesting to me. If you put something like wax or silicone oil on the balls, they will indeed "play differently," and that's because the friction factor will be greatly decreased. But is that a bad thing? If you decrease the friction, you also decrease the throw - a common problem on cut shots.
Cue builders offer shafts that are designed to decrease cue ball deflection (squirt), so it can be said that those cues play differently from regular cues. Well, if it's okay to modify cues to ease one problem, why is it not okay to modify balls to ease another problem?
Just curious.
Roger
As Chuck has said.... wax puts a film on the balls that is not wanted. In addition to causing a stickiness the film also comes off on the cloth bed and rails and over time this can damage the cloth and cause permanent conditions that will spoil the play of the cloth.
Polish should not have a coating that stays on the surface of whatever it is used to polish. Polish should have a very mild abrasive.. like in body shop work polish would come after using rubbing compounds of diminishing abrasiveness, with polish being the least abrasive. Wax is then applied to protect the paint from environmental pollutants. Wax coats the paint with a protective film which wears off in the weather and the friction of movement. If it's not reapplied then more polishing will have to be done as the pollutants cause the paint to become microscopically uneven. Polishing makes the surface even... smooth and it's the smoothness that causes brightness to the eye.
I use Plexiglas polish. Plexiglas is prone to scratching so almost no abrasive in the cleaner/polish is wanted. Brillianize is a such a product and it works great on pool balls leaving them clean, polished and without a wax film. It is made to polish plastic, Plexiglas etc and works great on pool balls. I just discovered it a few months ago when my copier repair guy used it to make the platen on the copier slicker, so paper would slide across it easier when using the auto feeder. I brought some home and it works great on my pool balls.
www.brillianize.com
Rich, so how does this rule that you quote fall in with all the players that have BallStar, or the pool halls that use ball polishers?
Pretty surprising rule, but thanks for tracking that down and sharing it with us. Tell Dennis to stop polishing his balls! LOL!