12 foot, 137 Craps Table Great for a Home Game Room!! This craps table is an excellent value!! Description: Las Vegas style craps layout (blue or green felt) Replaceable felt design Green or blue pyramid dice rubber on both ends Double row oak chip racks w/ 12 positions.
Regulation size 4' x 12' with a various color felts. It can accommodate 16 players & requires three dealers. (smaller size is 5' x 8' and requires 2 dealers) ROULETTE TABLE. Regulation size 4' x 8'. We have a smaller table with 16 inch wheel for smaller rooms. It can accommodate up to 15 players. Requires one dealer. Craps Tables These Permanent Craps Tables are made of top quality materials and they feature detail-rich craftsmanship. We offer Classic Casino Craps Tables with Slab Legs or H-Style Legs in 6-14 Foot Sizes; and a 6.5 Foot One-Man Craps Table. Browse the Craps Tables below to find the model that best meets your preferences. Craps tables in land-based casinos could theoretically serve a total of 22 players as there are 22 sections to hold their chips. Normally, there are between 14 and 18 players at the craps table. The Craps Table Layout. Craps tables have always looked terrifying to players with less experience and some even avoid it. While this online Craps casino game guide will acquaint you with several of the most popular Craps bets, casino beginners may need a more in-depth Craps explanation, which you can find in our Beginners Guide to Craps. Craps Table Basics. Before beginning to play online Craps games, it's helpful to get a run-down of the Craps table game basics.
Please remember! These are archives! The Dice Setter message board was shut down. What is published here are just a few of the threads documenting the early days of dice setting strategies and opinions written by the pioneers of dice influencing.
Table Height
Steve
I just put together a little practice table, but it feels way too high sitting on top of my Ping-Pong table. Does anybody know the exact height of a table? Is their a standard height, or do they vary from casino to casino?
Thanks in advance
Billy
Steve, Table heights vary some but if you put the landing zone at 27- 28 inches it should feel comfortable for you. The other thing that happens is the heights of the chip rails vary. I don't like shooting at Paris because the rail is higher. If you are tall you might not notice it but short players really notice the difference. I'm 5'10' so I'm kinda in the middle but when the rail gets in the way of the protruding section of my body that's above my belt it will throw me off.
roadrunner
What Is The Regulation Size Of A Craps Table Rules
The table I had a chance to put a tape measure to was 26' from the carpet to the surface of the table.
May the dice be nice!
Heavy
Well, I sort of backed into it. From floor to the chip rack was 38 inches. Now, the rubber pyramid sheets that go on the back wall come in 4' by 9' strips, as I recall. So if I do the math - 38 minus 9 - I come up with 29 inches - which, by the way - is the exact same heigth someone else - I believe the man in black - posted here a few months back. Anyway - I'm thinking 29' to the top of the table surface. If you're table top is 3/4 inch plywood then you're down close to 28' to the bottom of the table. Make sense?
Now, its going to FEEL different to you regardless of the height because you're used to having to lean over the rail. There are some ways to simulate that. Probably the easiest - if you have a bar stool of about that height (or you could use a chair sitting on a box to raise the back high enough - set the chair seat under the table - the chair back against the side in front of you - and stand behind the chair back when you reach down and pick up the dice to shoot. Hey - it ain't perfect, but it's cheap.
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What are the standard pool table sizes and dimensions, and how large of a room is required for each?
Standard size pool tables, along with the playing surface dimensions (measured between the noses of the cushions) are:
- 12-ft (snooker): 140″ (356.9 cm) x 70″ (177.8 cm)
- 10-ft (oversized): 112″ (284.5 cm) x 56″ (142.2 cm)
- 9-ft (regulation size table): 100″ (254 cm) x 50″ (127 cm)
- 8-ft+ (pro 8): 92″ (233.7 cm) x 46″ (116.8 cm)
- 8-ft (typical home table): 88″ (223.5 cm) x 44″ (111.8 cm)
- 7-ft+ (large 'bar box'): 78-82″ (198.1-208.3 cm) x 39-41″ (99.1-104.1 cm)
- 7-ft ('bar box'): 74-78″ (188-198.1 cm) x 37-39″ (94-99.1 cm)
- 6-ft ('small bar box'): 70-74″ (177.8-188 cm) x 35-37″ (88.9-94 cm)
The distance between the diamonds can be found by dividing the playing surface length by 8 or the width by 4.
For recommended room sizes, see the table of data quoted below.
More info can be found here: Wikipedia pool table dimensions resource page.
Standard size pool tables, along with the playing surface dimensions (measured between the noses of the cushions) are:
- 12-ft (snooker): 140″ (356.9 cm) x 70″ (177.8 cm)
- 10-ft (oversized): 112″ (284.5 cm) x 56″ (142.2 cm)
- 9-ft (regulation size table): 100″ (254 cm) x 50″ (127 cm)
- 8-ft+ (pro 8): 92″ (233.7 cm) x 46″ (116.8 cm)
- 8-ft (typical home table): 88″ (223.5 cm) x 44″ (111.8 cm)
- 7-ft+ (large 'bar box'): 78-82″ (198.1-208.3 cm) x 39-41″ (99.1-104.1 cm)
- 7-ft ('bar box'): 74-78″ (188-198.1 cm) x 37-39″ (94-99.1 cm)
- 6-ft ('small bar box'): 70-74″ (177.8-188 cm) x 35-37″ (88.9-94 cm)
The distance between the diamonds can be found by dividing the playing surface length by 8 or the width by 4.
For recommended room sizes, see the table of data quoted below.
More info can be found here: Wikipedia pool table dimensions resource page.
from RSB FAQ:
The minimum space for a table is the playing area plus the length of a cue (58″) plus about 6 inches for the back swing, more for comfort, on each side. This gives:
'Seven foot' tables vary in size. Work down from the 8′ dimensions. '8+' is an 'oversized' 8-foot table.
If your room does not meet these minimum size requirements, many billiard retailers will suggest that you can still put a table in, and use short cues (52″, or 48″). Many people have found they are unhappy having to resort to shorter cues, and should have either gotten a smaller table, or no table at all. Others, of course, take the opposite view — they are delighted to have any table.
In the end, only you will know whether you are happy with the room dimensions and need for short cues. Before you spend $2000 for a table that will cause you to smash the walls in frustration, try this:
(1) Find an indulgent pool hall when it's not busy.
(2) Measure your space (at home) carefully, including the distance from the table to all walls that require a special cue
(3) Go to the pool hall with a piece or pieces of plywood or some such, and a short cue, and set up the 'walls' to replicate where the walls would be in your house. Play for several hours, using the short cue when needed.
Between two tables you can do with about the length of a cue, the limit is caused not by the cue, but by the player being able to go into his stance between the tables. Deluxe rooms really need more room on all sides to let possible passers-by move without bumping into the players.
from realkingcobra (on AZB):
What Is The Regulation Size Of A Craps Table Game
A 4 1/2 x 9ft pool table gets it's measurements from finish of rail to finish of rail.
4 1/2 feet = 54″
9ft = 108″
Take the playing surface of a 9ft pool table, it's 50″x100″ now add in the 2″ of cloth on the cushions on the side rails to the playing surface, what you come up with is 2″ of cushion/cloth on the left side rail, plus 2″ of cloth/cushion on the right side rail, plus the 50″ of the playing surface from side to side. Now, add that together and you have 2″+2″+50″ = 54″ which equals 4 1/2 feet.
Now, if you double that measurement you'd be adding up 4 side rails at 2″ each … remember you're DOUBLING the width, so that means instead of adding just 2 rails, you'd be adding up the width of 4 rails, at 2″ each, plus you'd be doubling the width of the table side to side being 50″ twice, so thats 100″ … now add up … 2″+2″+2″+2″+50″+50″= 108″ which equals 9 feet even, EXCEPT … we all know all pool tables only have 2 end rails and NOT 4, so in order to keep the playing surface twice as long as it is wide … you have to subtract 2 of them 4 rails as ghost rails … meaning they're not really there on the pool table, so if you take and subtract the 4″ of ghost rails from the 9ft … 108″ that leaves you with 104″, now subtract the 4″ of cloth/cushions that ARE on the table, and you end up with 100″ … so that's how you get a 50″x100″ playing surface out of a 4 1/2 x 9 pool table.
What Is The Regulation Size Of A Craps Tables
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