Originally Posted by travisbickle
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Sidespin on a snooker table both with and against the nap
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Originally Posted by vmax View PostIt has to be the correct weight for the amount of swerve you need to contact BOB, too hard and it's not enough, too slow and it's too much.
They will tell you that maximum SIT happens at low pace with trace side and cue ball sliding on contact with OB, yet the evidence for this comes from Dr. Dave's site where the player playing the shots pivots his cue (addressing centre cue ball first) to apply sidespin with cue ball and object ball only a couple of inches apart. Do this yourself using differing amounts of sidespin and power and see what happens and then play the same shots applying side with cue parallel to the line of aim and then both methods with the balls a couple of feet apart giving time for the swerve effect to take place, and with that pivot shot at low pace with trace side and the cue ball not sliding but rolling on the 30 degree axis you'll find it's different.
I've played the game enough to know what angle the ball will take after they collide, plus I've videoed myself with a gopro, plus all the many many videos on here.
I asked a question quite a few pages ago to you asking how jimmy white managed to pot the ball as with the screenshots I gave it clearly was not going in the pocket.
I would like to here your explanation for that.
Even if the cueball did swerve off and then come back online (even though I doubt it with the space between the balls and the fact he was holding his cue parallel to the table) it would be irrelevant as it didn't hit back of the ball.
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Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostSo what? I didn't believe it and now I want to learn all the parameters so I can explain those effects to students and how they would go about using them but not one of you experts has been able to fully explain just how much pace and spin is too much. Maybe one of Dr. Dave's videos can explain the limits but none that I've seen.
The amount of deflection would depend on your cue and how good of a cueist you are.
Why should it be any different for SIT?
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Originally Posted by dan_ormerod View PostTo be fair you wouldn't tell a student that you have to adjust your aim by so many millimeters when using side as you need to take into account how much deflection of the cue ball will be.
The amount of deflection would depend on your cue and how good of a cueist you are.
Why should it be any different for SIT?
People need to stop asking facile questions and work it for themselves.
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Originally Posted by dan_ormerod View PostI'm afraid I can't disagree more vmax. The cueball doesn't hit the BOB.
I've played the game enough to know what angle the ball will take after they collide, plus I've videoed myself with a gopro, plus all the many many videos on here.
I asked a question quite a few pages ago to you asking how jimmy white managed to pot the ball as with the screenshots I gave it clearly was not going in the pocket.
I would like to here your explanation for that.
Even if the cueball did swerve off and then come back online (even though I doubt it with the space between the balls and the fact he was holding his cue parallel to the table) it would be irrelevant as it didn't hit back of the ball.
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Originally Posted by Hello, Mr Big Shot View PostAnd the physics vmax? The Fizz-Icks! Ever gonna discuss that? That's where the *evidence* comes from mate. Real, provable, peer reviewed evidence.
Your evidence is, in comparison, a little thin.
Originally Posted by Terry Davidson View PostI agree. Plants are not a SIT effect at all and can't be used to prove SIT.
Originally Posted by dan_ormerod View PostI asked a question quite a few pages ago to you asking how jimmy white managed to pot the ball as with the screenshots I gave it clearly was not going in the pocket.
On top of that I have proved that a ball loaded with sidespin rolls forward spinning on a 30 degree axis so any throw would not take place along the horizontal plane, unless of course like Dr. Dave you skew the results by showing all SIT examples with balls only a couple of inches apart and the cue pivoted with very little deflection at that gentle pace, hence his sliding cue ball excuse.
A thick enough contact that makes an OB into the side of the pocket is not proof of SIT and the alledged physics that mean it only happens at low pace with trace side and a sliding CB on certain angles with a pivoted cue is an SIT get out clause and shows that Dr. Dave can come to the wrong conclusion with skewed experiments that incude plants and sets where squeeze is happening.
He needs to do the same experiments with balls a good distance apart, to allow for deflection and swerve, on a napped cloth with a player who cues parallel to the line of aim when applying sidespin. I've done them and the results are different to his and it's **** all to do with my cue actionSpeak up, you've got to speak up against the madness, you've got speak your mind if you dare
but don't try to get yourself elected, for if you do you'll have to cut your hair
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Originally Posted by vmax View PostWhen I played a spinning CB hugging the edge of the triangle to cancel out the deflection and swerve, the OB didn't throw one little bit and when I played the same trace side pivot shot, with the CB and OB only a couple of inches apart, as the bloke in the Dr. Dave video I got the same result as he did, less deflection, nothing more and that is proof enough for me. You need to get on a table sometime and have a go for yourself, Oh I forgot, you don't play do you, and you don't understand the physics either, you just link to something on the internet to look clever, but you actually have no knowledge or experience of your own.
Dr. Dave says otherwise and uses it extensively to prove his SIT theory.
Not clear at all as the camera was at an angle to the shot and not directly behind the line of aim. And the cue ball can move 2mm over that distance when using side and that's all he probably needed. Why do you think these shots can only be played pocket weight over such short distances, why do you believe that a ball with an almost frictionless surface spinning at such a gentle pace transfers it's sidespin to a stationary ball with an almost frictionless surface in a gear effect to throw the stationary ball in a different direction ?
On top of that I have proved that a ball loaded with sidespin rolls forward spinning on a 30 degree axis so any throw would not take place along the horizontal plane, unless of course like Dr. Dave you skew the results by showing all SIT examples with balls only a couple of inches apart and the cue pivoted with very little deflection at that gentle pace, hence his sliding cue ball excuse.
A thick enough contact that makes an OB into the side of the pocket is not proof of SIT and the alledged physics that mean it only happens at low pace with trace side and a sliding CB on certain angles with a pivoted cue is an SIT get out clause and shows that Dr. Dave can come to the wrong conclusion with skewed experiments that incude plants and sets where squeeze is happening.
He needs to do the same experiments with balls a good distance apart, to allow for deflection and swerve, on a napped cloth with a player who cues parallel to the line of aim when applying sidespin. I've done them and the results are different to his and it's **** all to do with my cue action
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Good stuff this from Ian, many will know the first part low with right-hand side, not so many will know about the high on the white with right-hand side....
https://youtu.be/Nf4ipL_v1U0?feature=sharedโช ๐ด๐ก๐ข๐ค๐ต๐โซ๐ณ๏ธ๐
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Originally Posted by Cue crafty View PostGood stuff this from Ian, many will know the first part low with right-hand side, not so many will know about the high on the white with right-hand side....
https://youtu.be/Nf4ipL_v1U0?feature=sharedSpeak up, you've got to speak up against the madness, you've got speak your mind if you dare
but don't try to get yourself elected, for if you do you'll have to cut your hair
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Originally Posted by vmax View Post
He's right that this happens but quite wrong as to why, side does not transfer to the object ball and kick it in a different direction from the contact point, I've experimented and proved it to myself, it's all about the cue ball deflecting and swerving along the cloth and it does so differently in regards to where it's struck and how hard and from what distance and whether spinning in the same direction as the nap, spinning against the nap or spinning along the nap. I've stuck to Ray Readons explanation in his book Classic Snooker and it works and makes sense but as long as you adjust your aiming to compensate then it doesn't really matter who's wrong or right.โช ๐ด๐ก๐ข๐ค๐ต๐โซ๐ณ๏ธ๐
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Originally Posted by Cue crafty View Post
Been out tonight, so slight delay in seeing your reply V, yes i do agree, but the one scenario I'm not familiar with is the cloth Ian is playing and explaining this theory on. But I do think, this superfine he's probably doing this test experiment on holds other factors in comparison to my club cloths?
Place the ball with the stripe in the horizontal position and watch how the spin changes from horizontal to about a 30 degree axis as it rolls forward and then dissapears when the sidespin is lost and the ball slows down to a stop.
This takes effect later according to power and also later on a napless cloth than a napped one but it still happens and it's right on this change of axis that the ball will start to swerve back from where it deflected to.
This can't be seen with a spotted cue ball as all you'll see is the ball spinnig sideways but it does so on a tilted axis just like our planet does, and maybe this is the reason why ๐คจ
This doesn't happen with power screw sidespin shots before contact with the object ball as the ball is also spinning backwards as well but does happen after contact when it comes back and no longer spinning backwards.
One must also take into consideration that with screw sidespin you can contact far less of the cue ball off centre than you can with top sidespin on the horizontal plane so the deflection is less and the swerve happens sooner as you're in effect playing a mini swerve shot by striking down.
It's a minefield playing with side but all anyone needs to know is to compensate your aiming for the deflection and swerve through experimentation and get used to your own cue.Speak up, you've got to speak up against the madness, you've got speak your mind if you dare
but don't try to get yourself elected, for if you do you'll have to cut your hair
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