I don't see the importance of this brand. I have seen other racks with bearings, but I never noticed cloth damage due to racks. I believe most damage is done by people dropping balls onto the table into the rack. The worst is when people "tap" (lol, or "pound") then head ball. Other damage is done by the cueball skidding to the rack from the headstring.
I forgot to add, there are some places that have no clue about racks. It's good for a rack to be a bit oversized so your fingers can push the balls up tight. It's good to have a tight radius inside the 3 corners -- otherwise the corner balls hit the radius part and the balls immediately next to it fan out, not touching each other. Roll-a-Rack (and many others) are good this way.
2 comments:
I don't see the importance of this brand. I have seen other racks with bearings, but I never noticed cloth damage due to racks. I believe most damage is done by people dropping balls onto the table into the rack. The worst is when people "tap" (lol, or "pound") then head ball. Other damage is done by the cueball skidding to the rack from the headstring.
I forgot to add, there are some places that have no clue about racks. It's good for a rack to be a bit oversized so your fingers can push the balls up tight. It's good to have a tight radius inside the 3 corners -- otherwise the corner balls hit the radius part and the balls immediately next to it fan out, not touching each other. Roll-a-Rack (and many others) are good this way.
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