I have one of those training balls that are advertised all over this site, took it to the club and it's noticeably bigger than all the balls there, I would say easily 1/16 of an inch. The table there is very old, I think Joe Davis once played an exhibition on it, so I suppose they could just be worn down? Or the club were being cheap and bought a set of 2 inch balls, I don't know. I'm not too keen on them to be honest, they fit in the pockets better but they're harder to aim properly. Were smaller balls ever standard for snooker?
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You may have a set of old super crystalate balls that are worn down. The diameter has always been 2-1/16" for the past hundred years or so for both billiards and snooker. If you're talking the 1950's or whatever maybe you have a set of ivory balls. If that's the case offer to replace them with Aramith Tournament Champion balls and keep the old ivory ones and sell them. They used to wear down all the time and the solution was to shoot another elephant.
I've seen a set of 18yr old supers which were well worn down and I've also seen a set of Aramith balls where the cueball is well worn down and VERY lightTerry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
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Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostYou may have a set of old super crystalate balls that are worn down. The diameter has always been 2-1/16" for the past hundred years or so for both billiards and snooker. If you're talking the 1950's or whatever maybe you have a set of ivory balls. If that's the case offer to replace them with Aramith Tournament Champion balls and keep the old ivory ones and sell them. They used to wear down all the time and the solution was to shoot another elephant.
I've seen a set of 18yr old supers which were well worn down and I've also seen a set of Aramith balls where the cueball is well worn down and VERY light
2. Balls
(a) The balls shall be of an approved composition and shall each have a diameter of 52.5mm with a tolerance of +/- 0.05mm;
(b) they shall be of equal weight and the difference between the heaviest ball and the lightest ball should be no more than 3g; and
(c) a ball or set of balls may be changed by agreement between the players or on a decision by the referee.
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Originally Posted by DandyA View PostTerry, sorry to be pedantic but the current World Snooker rules are below ... so 2 1/16" balls (52.3875mm) are outside the specification, the minimum allowed is 52.45mm and the maximum 52.55mm ... does anyone know when the rules became metric?
2. Balls
(a) The balls shall be of an approved composition and shall each have a diameter of 52.5mm with a tolerance of +/- 0.05mm;
(b) they shall be of equal weight and the difference between the heaviest ball and the lightest ball should be no more than 3g; and
(c) a ball or set of balls may be changed by agreement between the players or on a decision by the referee.Terry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
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Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostI shall measure mine with a digital caliper and see what the 1G balls are. I had thought the metric number was equal to 2-1/16" but it's actually bigger according to your calculations. It will be interesting to see what my caliper saysMy favourite players: Walter Lindrum (AUS), Neil Robertson (AUS), Eddie Charlton (AUS), Robby Foldvari (AUS), Vinnie Calabrese (AUS), Jimmy White, Stephen Hendry, Alex Higgins, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Dominic Dale and Barry Hawkins.
I dream of a 147 (but would be happy with a 100)
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a couple of points if I may:
1. Aramith sell there balls as 2 1/16" and not as 52.5mm
2. Aramith do sell 2" sets in the lower (lighter) range of balls.
3. The old rules stipulated a ball diameter range from 2 1/16" to 2 3/32"
4. In the old old days with ivory balls that would be sent off for regrinding back to round, the SMALLEST allowed size was 2 1/16". Any ball under that size was scrapped as a playing ball.
my view on this thread is the balls in the club are probably the lower range of balls and where always 2".
The size stipulated in the rules was a rough conversion from 2 1/16" to millimetres and instead of saying 52.387mm they rounded up to 52.5mm with the tolerance being 0.05mm (which I think was a typo and they meant +/-0.5mm, giving a range size of 52.0-53.0mm)
just checked my TCs and they are spot on 2 1/16" and yes under 52.5mm (just over 52.3mm being only 1/10mm accuracy)Last edited by DeanH; 16 January 2015, 03:19 PM.Up the TSF! :snooker:
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Originally Posted by DandyA View PostTerry, sorry to be pedantic but the current World Snooker rules are below ... so 2 1/16" balls (52.3875mm) are outside the specification, the minimum allowed is 52.45mm and the maximum 52.55mm ... does anyone know when the rules became metric?
2. Balls
(a) The balls shall be of an approved composition and shall each have a diameter of 52.5mm with a tolerance of +/- 0.05mm;
(b) they shall be of equal weight and the difference between the heaviest ball and the lightest ball should be no more than 3g; and
(c) a ball or set of balls may be changed by agreement between the players or on a decision by the referee.
The other problem was ensuring I had the largest part of the ball in the caliper but what I did was moved the ball back and forth inside the jaws and I got the 52.3mm.
Even though the rules do state 52.45mm to 52.55mm I think that has to be incorrect as I doubt Aramith/Saluc would supply smaller balls, however mine are definitely right at 52.3xx and not 54.45mm. So can anyone explain this?
As the old rules stated 2-16" (or 2.0625) that does work out closer to 52.35mm. When I do a conversion of 2.0625" I get 52.385mm but my 1G balls are definitely smallerLast edited by Terry Davidson; 16 January 2015, 06:20 PM.Terry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
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Saluc print the resin density on the ATC's box. it's 1,87.
Assuming the density is a stable value, we can calculate the ball's size from it's weight.
A standard ATC ball with 52.5mm should weight 141,6831289 grams
The outer limits for 52.55 and 52.45mm make for 142,0883235 and 141,2787053 grams.
It's notable that span is far tighter than the 3g variance officially allowed within the rules.
With the ^3 exponent in conversion from weight to diameter, it's also probably more exact to calculate the average diameter from the weight than measuring with calipers.
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Originally Posted by Redphex View PostSaluc print the resin density on the ATC's box. it's 1,87.
Assuming the density is a stable value, we can calculate the ball's size from it's weight.
A standard ATC ball with 52.5mm should weight 141,6831289 grams
The outer limits for 52.55 and 52.45mm make for 142,0883235 and 141,2787053 grams.
It's notable that span is far tighter than the 3g variance officially allowed within the rules.
With the ^3 exponent in conversion from weight to diameter, it's also probably more exact to calculate the average diameter from the weight than measuring with calipers.
Now we have the problem that we're assuming the resin density is always constant but as it's a mixed formula that might not be so and it could be 1.8699999 or something.
I think the only way is to actually measure the balls with a more accurate device than my digital caliper. But then again, who cares? In answer to the question above, the smaller the balls the easier they are to pocket but if you play in tournaments you would have a hell of a time switching to 1G balls plus a smaller diameter automatically assumes a lighter weight.Terry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
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Originally Posted by DeanH View Posta couple of points if I may:
1. Aramith sell there balls as 2 1/16" and not as 52.5mm
2. Aramith do sell 2" sets in the lower (lighter) range of balls.
3. The old rules stipulated a ball diameter range from 2 1/16" to 2 3/32"
4. In the old old days with ivory balls that would be sent off for regrinding back to round, the SMALLEST allowed size was 2 1/16". Any ball under that size was scrapped as a playing ball.
my view on this thread is the balls in the club are probably the lower range of balls and where always 2".
The size stipulated in the rules was a rough conversion from 2 1/16" to millimetres and instead of saying 52.387mm they rounded up to 52.5mm with the tolerance being 0.05mm (which I think was a typo and they meant +/-0.5mm, giving a range size of 52.0-53.0mm)
just checked my TCs and they are spot on 2 1/16" and yes under 52.5mm (just over 52.3mm being only 1/10mm accuracy)
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