Ping pong is not our only competition. My cousin and I are always combative… perchance too combative. It could be as slight as who could eat faster or eat a higher quantity… whom could consume food slower or less. It did not matter. If there was a means one person could best the other in something, we’d contend.

Unfortunately, the small house my wife and I bought doesn’t have a lot of space for the many ways my cousin and I like to compete. Following much calculation, we finally settled on a billiard table with a Stiga Fusion table tennis conversion top. Fundamentally this provides us the ability to play either billiards or table tennis on the same table in the same room.

Thus now my cousin and my infamous rivalry remains. Naturally, he constantly complains that it is not the real thing. Even though he ordinarily bests me in pocket billiards, each time we place the table tennis conversion top along the billiard table, it appears his game drifts.

To put it plainly, I think it’s because I’m just simply the superior ping-pong player. But regrettably, he possesses too many excuses. The height is not correct. The dimensions are incorrect. The list proceeds on. Thus I procured the measuring tape. The elevation and dimensions are right on to the official table tennis proportions. Then he claimed the table caused the incorrect bounce; that somehow the billiard table below affected the velocity and height of the bounce.

So we investigated the official bounce measurement (indeed, there is an official bounce measurement). It is for every 30 centimeters of drop, there ought to be a 23 cm bounce. We tested the bounce in over a dozen placements on the conversion top. In every spot the ball bounced virtually perfectly straight up and nearly exactly 23 cm high. So you realize, table tennis conversion tops do a perfectly good job duplicating a strong game of table tennis. And my first cousin has no excuses. I am just the greater table tennis player.

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