bill duffy
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Within an 18-21 gram range, can you produce more force when striking a cue ball with a lighter or heavier cue?
Newton 2nd law -- force = mass (grams) * acceleration (miles/sec)**2. (1) I don't see how weight is involved. (2) the body/arm propelling the cue must figure in.LostConjugate said:Higher weight gives you more stability. Not more or less force.
bill duffy said:Newton 2nd law -- force = mass (grams) * acceleration (miles/sec)**2. (1) I don't see how weight is involved. (2) the body/arm propelling the cue must figure in.
DaveC426913 said:While it is the arm that generates the force, it is the cue that transfers it to the ball.
A heavier cue will transfer more kinetic energy to the cueball, as it will not slow down quite as much in the collision.
Look at the extreme. If you used a sledgehammer (and got it up to the same velocity as a cue), when it hit the ball, the ball would accelerate to 100% of the speed of the sledgehammer, whereas the sledgehammer would decelerate negligibly.
S_Happens said:The only time you're really concerned with a max force.
DaveC426913 said:Who said anything about max force?
It would actually be close to 200% (or twice) the speed of the sledgehammer. (Assuming an elastic collision, and the sledgehammer mass is a lot larger than the cue ball mass.)DaveC426913 said:Look at the extreme. If you used a sledgehammer (and got it up to the same velocity as a cue), when it hit the ball, the ball would accelerate to 100% of the speed of the sledgehammer, whereas the sledgehammer would decelerate negligibly.
Certainly. If this were true:Redbelly98 said:EDIT:
Interesting question. If we consider "optimal" to mean what gives the cue ball it's highest velocity, then ever more massive sticks would have less and less velocity.
But it isn't.Redbelly98 said:Assume your arm exerts a fixed amount of force over a fixed distance
bill duffy said:According to R Shepard, Amateur Physics for the QAmateur Pool Player, p22, "for a given for ce on the cue stick and a given stroke length, a light cue stick will acquire the same energy as a heavy cue stick." So that's that...