I want to build one.
Whats the differences?
Are American table dimensions the same as Aussie or UK table dimensions
I want to build one.
Whats the differences?
Are American table dimensions the same as Aussie or UK table dimensions
Same table for each game, just different balls.
The little tables are 6x3 and the pub size is generally 7x3.5 or 8x4
we had a 9 x 4.5 at Mum & Dad's - it's good size if you have the room.
full championship size is size is 12x6
Billiards is with 3 balls. Two red, one white
Snooker is with the reds (15) and the coloured balls (green yellow, brown, blue, pink,black)
and the numbered balls are for 8-ball or Kelly Pool
Thanks Gumby ,I thought so, but better to check than be sorry.
Glad Gumby knows his balls.
Also for the extremely popular 9 ballQuote:
Originally Posted by Gumby
Sounds like Grunt's dancing condoms got it right
:doghouse:
I thought they were bananas :- (really)
bananas don't come in that colour range
There is one other difference that I am aware of.
A pool table has pockets with straight sides where they join the cushion or rail.
A snooker table has pockets with curved sides where they join the cushion or rail.
Putting a ball in the pocket on a snooker table requires better accuracy and a soft touch.
Also, a billiard table has no pockets. Scored by number of caroms only. (Pool is also known as pocket billiards.) Also, also, IIRC a snooker table is somewhat larger than the others. And ditto rrich, those round corners are sumbishes.
Joe
Oh, so when the guys say they're going to play pool, maybe they're not really going to play po....?? :doh: :U
All I know is that seeing that I don't play it much (though do enjoy it) I'm crap for the first 7 or 8 games of pool after a long spell.
And then I play like a man possessed :U
practise on a snooker table, which is free in most clubs, and ya pool game becomes alot easier!
The wonderful art of snooker and billiards has been bastardised by the seppos.. :D
There ARE pockets on a billiards table. Snooker is a game played on a Billiard table. In billiards (the competition balls are now coloured; a red; a yellow and a white. the red being the spotted ball) points are scored for cannons and pots.
A billiards table is 12 feet by 6 feet with 6 netted pockets, 2 at each corner and 1 each side equidistant from the corners and adjacent to each other..
Kelly Pool, 8-Ball, 9-Ball, Pool are pub games played by people unable to play the pure form of the table game. :cool: They require little skill and a lot of bashing around with stunted cues carved with all sorts of ridiculous cowboy patterns. :no:
Signed
an 'A' Grade Snooker player who won the only 8-Ball Calcutta he ever played in and laughed at how easy it was as he departed with a tad over 2 grand in his pocket. :D:D:D:D:D
Back to Bob's original question, there are plenty of sizes and forms to choose from (including no pockets, if you like, but 3-cushion caroms can be frustrating).
For a quite complete dissertation, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billiards.
For exact shapes of pocket entrances, search Google for plans. The cushions should be available from a specialty supplier. Ditto the cloth.
[Bear in mind that for maximum utility, the cushions should be at least one cue-stick length from walls or other obstacles. This could dictate a non-standard size for the table or the cue sticks, or both.]
Joe
On yah Sheddy, can't believe some of these answers people have been posting!
Also the angled entrances is also an American "innovation" as far as I know.
They make it easier to get a pot but destroy your chances of doing a finesse cushion shot near the mouth. IE its a dumbed down sort of idea.
EDIT Sheddy I can't agree with what you say about pool... it would mean that I have wasted a large part of my youth.
Also I hate large white balls, if you know what I mean.
Bob, why dont you make a round or eliptical one:D Ive played on a round one and its very challenging:wink:
8 ball used to have half banded colour balls numbered 1 to 7, the black ball, bumber 8, then the full coloured balls numbered 9 to 15. Whatever, you potted first you stayed on - banded or solid colour. The cue ball was and still is white. In some states the cue ball was slightly smaller (and more difficult to control) than the coloured balls and in some states the white ball was bigger (which made trick shots easier). Nowadays they use 7 red, 7 yellow, the black and the white cue ball. I believe this change was made at competition level to cater for Television broadcasting of the game. The same happened for Billiards, the white cue ball with the dot has been replaced by a yellow ball.
Cheers
Cliff, Oh shush you! I'm as good at games as I am at woodworking. :D
But I'm serious, I'm sure I've played a game where one has to sink their half colours, the other the fulls - but not sure where the black and white come into it. Anything else is too confusing. And I'm confused enough already. :B
Thanks for that shedhand. Typical, I start learning something and some smart alec has to change it.
Sheddy, the only reason you won that pool comp is that I wasn't there.
My favourate shot is the 8 ball break!:D
Snooker is a game for tight wades that drink at clubs and afraid to enter a public bar.
Where I come from its "ya money on the table or blood on the floor" :cool:
Bob have a look at this:) Its a yank company with heaps of tables and a construction page that shows pics of a table in construction and has one great cut away view of the base/cushion/legs/rails etc
http://www.ahpooltables.com/pool-table-construction.htm
Have a go at building the "Versailles" :2tsup:
Bob,
Are you going to give it a slate top? I would like to build one (after I've finished building me house) and research that I have done is sourcing the slate.
Hi Lig,
I like the general lines of some of the mission tables
I wouldn't bother building the Versailles (unless it was a commission job)
I like your earlier suggestion of a round or oval table - very intriguing.
Rectangular is a bit ho-hum, a kidney shape might even be interesting
Rod,
I won't bother with slate because of the environment it'll live in.
I'll probably use 32mm mdf or hmr chipboard with either a tempered masonite or compressed fibre cement overlay.
I realy like this. The way the top floats looks great and it has the Art Deco style base. The end aluminimun looking bit on the base i dont like but the rest i do:)
The game is called Eight Ball. As stated the rules are simple. Which ever type of ball thast you sink first is your set of balls to sink. If you knock in the black or eight ball before all of your type of balls have been sunk, you lose the game.
The game was created because of the tables found in many American pubs. Usually, the players insert coins to release the balls from the table and start a game. Any ball put into a pocket is trapped by the table. The white or cue ball is slightly smaller than the coloured balls and will fall out of the table if a player scratches or pockets the cue ball.
BTW - Here the low numbered balls (1-7) are solid in colour while the high numbered balls (9-15) have a colour stripe. (Affectionally known as stripes and solids.)
I most humbly doubt this. I'm pretty sure Eight-Ball was around long before the advent of coin-operated tables. Just one of many, many variations developed over the centuries. And the coin-op tables swallow non-cue balls no matter the game: nine-ball, straight, etc.
Joe