the word "throw" comes into phrases especially when intentional sides and shaft stiffness and ferrules are discuused. The cues I play with are generally stiff and I am not a person who plays excessive sides of the white ball. When i do play sides especially on a long pot and I play sides softly I sometimes notice the white ball arcing gently before hitting the object ball and not hitting where i aimed at. This is not throw I would assume. I would assume throw to be the result of the flex of a shaft when hitting the white ball. The effect would be more pronounced the harder you strike the white. The is because the harder one hits the white with intentional sides the more likely the shaft is likely to flex in the same direction one is trikeing the cueball(ie either right or left) causing the cue ball to travel slightly off line in the opposite direction to the side the cue bll is struck( if you play right sides the the cue ball moves slightly left).
What i wish to know is how the various properties of a cue causes this phenomenon. Shaft flex/rigidity I can easily understand. I find it difficult to understand a ferrule causing significant "throw". I would think that a tip would be more likely culprit to cause this. Assume that I am completely ignorant, which i may be, on this matter. i would like to hear what people have to say on this phenomenon.
What i wish to know is how the various properties of a cue causes this phenomenon. Shaft flex/rigidity I can easily understand. I find it difficult to understand a ferrule causing significant "throw". I would think that a tip would be more likely culprit to cause this. Assume that I am completely ignorant, which i may be, on this matter. i would like to hear what people have to say on this phenomenon.
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