Originally Posted by Bigmeek
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Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostYou must be looking through your lenses then. I'm six foot two and when down in my stance I'm looking over the top of the lenses in my everyday specs and can't see a thing further than three feet away. Snooker specs aren't difficult to get hold of but a good pair is expensive, mine cost me £250.
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Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostYou must be looking through your lenses then. I'm six foot two and when down in my stance I'm looking over the top of the lenses in my everyday specs and can't see a thing further than three feet away. Snooker specs aren't difficult to get hold of but a good pair is expensive, mine cost me £250.
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Originally Posted by Jy1471 View Postthank you, ive worn glasses all my life, i have a squint in my right eye, sighting the balls isn't much of a problem its due the the way my eye behaves, im short sighted, maybe i should look into some Dennis Taylor Glasses!!
https://www.spex4less.com/?utm_noove...x4less%20Brand
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Originally Posted by Hello, Mr Big Shot View PostChrist, 250? I passed on some at 60 quid the other day. Mind you, they looked absolutely ridiculous.
I bought a cheap pair but they weren't very good so went for something better, maybe a bit too expensive, but they're a bespoke pair, and hey! it's only money and your sight is very important for cue sports.
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Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostI first bought a pair about thirty years ago before the days of thin plastic lenses and because the focal point of the lens was higher the lenses were about half an inch thick around the edges, made of glass and quite heavy. Also they made me look like Cosmo Smallpiece and I looked out the window at the night sky and discovered a new star so I only wore them once, wore contacts for many years until I got a constant irritation in my left eye when wearing them so tried snooker specs again and with the new ultra thin plastic lenses it's so much better.
I bought a cheap pair but they weren't very good so went for something better, maybe a bit too expensive, but they're a bespoke pair, and hey! it's only money and your sight is very important for cue sports.
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Got some rimless snooker glasses (quite Barry Starkish) as a Christmas present from my wife. After a disastrous first start (my optician had no experience of snooker glasses) when everything long was out of focus, the new prescription came good and now I rely on them entirely. Top notch. Cost, should have been £180, discounted to £130 as I changed my normal varifocal glasses at the same time. No cost for the mistake, of course, so I guess my optician got no profit on this occasion, just valuable experience.
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Originally Posted by Shockerz View PostDon't know if these are any good for guys that need a single lense type. Click Here.
I can't see for myself if it's a touching ball looking through my snooker specs lenses, but I simply look under my lenses for that as I'm short sighted and can see things close without specs.
I use varifocals everyday as I find it a pain to constantly put on and take off my specs when needing to see anything close up.
If you're long sighted and need specs to see things that are close up then I guess you don't need specs to play snooker, unless like Martin Gould you wear your everyday specs to be able to address the cue ball clearly and can then look over the top of the lenses to sight the object ball.
So a question is does anyone on this site who is long sighted wear specs when playing snooker or pool ?
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I'd agree with the point about bringing the bridge hand a bit further forward, to go through the ball better. The cue hand is not finishing fully into the chest which needs to happen. But I think you also need a pre shot routine. You seem to do it all in one. So a quick second to see the angle, step forward into the shot and to get the feet in the same position each time. You need to split into sections in this regard. I'd also have a look at your grip if necessary as you are rotating the grip to compensate your back arm coming accross a bit, but for short range shots this is ok, but it could find you out on the long balls.
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