Until an "official" video and/or document is released that fully describes the entire system and all of its special cases, threads like this are meaningless, IMO. The CTE "story" keeps changing, and special cases keep being added. I look forward to seeing the final and "official" versions by you and Stan. Only then we will truly have something meaningful and concrete to discuss, IMO.
So the eye position must also be varied with CTE. IMO, CTE is starting to become ridiculously complicated. You need to choose and/or judge alignment, eye position, bridge hand placement, ball distances, effective pivot length, ball centers, ball edges, etc. I hope Stan's video and/or your document can clarify and detail all of these elements. I will certainly be extremely impressed if you guys can. After reading this thread, and other threads like it in the past, it seems like one DVD cannot adequately cover all of the important questions adequately (with procedures, illustrations, and a wide range of examples, with camera angles that clearly show all of the important "subtleties" of the system), but I hope Stan's DVD proves me wrong.
By "can't," I assume you me "shouldn't be." Obvious it "can," and for shots of certain cut angles and ball distances, and with a certain style of pivot, parallel might even be appropriate.
Regards,
Dave
Dave, CTE is not complicated! Initially, it can seem that way, though.
Most students do not want to go backward before they go forward but when developing new skills whether visual or physical there is a learning curve. The entire CTE system to include PRO ONE can be learned in a few days up to a few weeks. The process becomes very natural within a few months.
I can think of no greater skill to possess than to be able to see the balls as they should be seen for center pocketing over and over and over.
Well, a perfectly straight stroke is one heck of a skill to have as well.
Hal figured out what to see at ball address......for all shots to be pocketed. That is what makes the system so visual. The movement to center cue ball following one's correct visual is very natural.
Stan
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