Hi williak,
I witnessed the phenomen you described many times in play. I've seen the cue ball hugging a side cushion then follow the curvature of the middle pocket and drop. If this happens in a serious frame of snooker you'd feel cheated.
Remember all the theories propounded as to why balls sometimes "kicked"? As I understand it, modern high speed cameras have proven that balls do not roll as it would on a perfectly level surface. Apparently the tolerance that the slates were floated to still leave enough for the balls to be "hopping" minutely on it's travel. I witnessed this personally the very night it was pointed out to me. I happened to be sitting where the table's bed was almost at my eyes' level, and saw it happen again and again. I know too that the table was one of the older ones that had been reconditioned by Thurston's, and therefore had hand-floated slates.
I raised the above because old ideas and theories are debunked all the time in various ways. I didn't just put out the idea of "canals" causing balls to jump just so. It's through years of observations and pondering the problem. Mind you, I'm not saying that loose cushions or "grease" build-up aren't a cause too. I'm pretty confident of what I say and I only regret that I haven't had the opportunity to stretch a bed cloth on a table that suffers with the "jumping balls" symptoms - at least not yet!
I witnessed the phenomen you described many times in play. I've seen the cue ball hugging a side cushion then follow the curvature of the middle pocket and drop. If this happens in a serious frame of snooker you'd feel cheated.
Remember all the theories propounded as to why balls sometimes "kicked"? As I understand it, modern high speed cameras have proven that balls do not roll as it would on a perfectly level surface. Apparently the tolerance that the slates were floated to still leave enough for the balls to be "hopping" minutely on it's travel. I witnessed this personally the very night it was pointed out to me. I happened to be sitting where the table's bed was almost at my eyes' level, and saw it happen again and again. I know too that the table was one of the older ones that had been reconditioned by Thurston's, and therefore had hand-floated slates.
I raised the above because old ideas and theories are debunked all the time in various ways. I didn't just put out the idea of "canals" causing balls to jump just so. It's through years of observations and pondering the problem. Mind you, I'm not saying that loose cushions or "grease" build-up aren't a cause too. I'm pretty confident of what I say and I only regret that I haven't had the opportunity to stretch a bed cloth on a table that suffers with the "jumping balls" symptoms - at least not yet!
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