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You either need a lot of practice, a lot of talent, or a lot of luck. Talent and practice increase your chances of luck. You need all 3 to actually be competitive.
What should I practice? I almost never do 7x7 and 6x6, so I don't really know what I should do.

The only reason why I want to do this is I want an official mean success.
 
Is it possible to make cutoff for 6x6 and 7x7 in most US competitions with little practice?
For the benefit of those of us who don't regularly check US competitions (… or are fast enough to not have to worry about cutoffs anymore), what are the typical cutoffs?
 
For the benefit of those of us who don't regularly check US competitions (… or are fast enough to not have to worry about cutoffs anymore), what are the typical cutoffs?
I'm going to a competition in a couple months, and the 7x7 cutoff is 6:00. Looking at another Midwest competition (same region as mine, often the same delegates and organizers as well), the 6x6 cutoff is 4:00.
 
I just had a comp with these cutoffs:
4x4: 1:45
5x5: 3:00
6x6: 8:00
7x7: 10:00

Usually they aren't this high, but it depends. This comp was designed to have high cutoffs.
 
Right, right. I think over here the "standard" cutoffs are 3:40 for 6 and 5:00 for 7, though there's also significant variation because some comps are deliberately laxer than usual to let more people have a chance at getting averages/means.

I almost never do 7x7 and 6x6,
This is the problem.

Do 200 solves, and if after that you're still not averaging sub-3:30/sub-5:00, ask again. You'll also have a much better idea of where your strengths and weaknesses are after doing a lot of solves.
 
Recently I've been getting slower on 5x5, I normally average sub-1:30 but now I can barely get past that time and now I average 1:30+. Any idea why and how can I get back to my usual average? I use yau.
 
I've got a 10x10 for christmas :cool:

I could solve it in something between one or two hours.
I don't know exactly because I didn't time it and didn't solve it at one time.

The biggest problem were the last two centers. I could do it but I needed almost 10 commutators because for the last lines there is not much freedom to build better lines.
Is there a way with less commutators?
In the very small booklet it seems that they build the centers from the middle? I couldn't find any information about this method. There are only a few videos for 10x10 and all of them use the "normal" Method with lines from the middle to one side and then from the middle to the other side.

My other problem was that I had to turn very accurate to not pop it. Would it help to lube it more?
Maybe I should use a table to realign it. On the couch it was sometimes a little hard because of this.
 
I've got a 10x10 for christmas :cool:

I could solve it in something between one or two hours.
I don't know exactly because I didn't time it and didn't solve it at one time.

The biggest problem were the last two centers. I could do it but I needed almost 10 commutators because for the last lines there is not much freedom to build better lines.
Is there a way with less commutators?
In the very small booklet it seems that they build the centers from the middle? I couldn't find any information about this method. There are only a few videos for 10x10 and all of them use the "normal" Method with lines from the middle to one side and then from the middle to the other side.

My other problem was that I had to turn very accurate to not pop it. Would it help to lube it more?
Maybe I should use a table to realign it. On the couch it was sometimes a little hard because of this.
I would recommend solving whichever lines look easiest for each centre, there is little point restricting yourself to a fixed order, for the final centre it is always possible to get 5 lines on the 10x10 centre complete without commutators (on one of the two final centres), you can then use less commutators to deal with the last 3 lines.
 
two questions
why do i perform better when i put the cube lower for 4x4 and 5x5
the difference is massive.i have a 30 second ao12 for 4x4 when i put the cube lower while my pb when i put the cube higher is 32
 
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