I agree with the basics of your first post
Andrew,
I do basically agree with what you are saying in your posts. Cueball speed, mass, and the amount of the energy from the cueball that is transferred to the rack determine how hard the break is, not the energy the shooter uses to start the cueball since much of that energy can be wasted in various ways.
My post only pointed out that they weren't always measuring all of the motion or inertia with a radar gun.
You need to commentate for the IPT. One of the things I found hilarious was the idea that Corr's lighter break that was making a ball most of the time was not as good as Archer's harder break that wasn't making any balls and was handing a nice open table over to Corr, effectively setting up her runs. Someone that realizes that hard does not absolutely equate to good and softer to bad when referring to breaks would be a nice change.
Hu
Andrew,
I do basically agree with what you are saying in your posts. Cueball speed, mass, and the amount of the energy from the cueball that is transferred to the rack determine how hard the break is, not the energy the shooter uses to start the cueball since much of that energy can be wasted in various ways.
My post only pointed out that they weren't always measuring all of the motion or inertia with a radar gun.
You need to commentate for the IPT. One of the things I found hilarious was the idea that Corr's lighter break that was making a ball most of the time was not as good as Archer's harder break that wasn't making any balls and was handing a nice open table over to Corr, effectively setting up her runs. Someone that realizes that hard does not absolutely equate to good and softer to bad when referring to breaks would be a nice change.
Hu
Andrew Manning said:Certainly there are good breaks and bad breaks, and that's not the same things as hard breaks and soft breaks. There are breaks where a lot of balls go in, and that's not necessarily the same thing as hard breaks. But the poster I was replying to was trying to make a distinction between fast breaks and hard breaks, and given the same balls and the same fullness of hit on the 1, there is no distinction; hard and fast mean exactly the same thing.
-Andrew