Log in

View Full Version : Do this to find your correct ball weight for you.....



Hammer
11-01-2013, 09:41 PM
Kneel down on one knee and with a ball in your hand let your arm go straight with the ball touching the floor. Have your palm face forward. With your fingers in the ball lift the ball off the floor and try to straighten your wrist. If it is hard to straighten your wrist or if you can straighten it and your hand is shaking trying to hold that position for at least 5 to 10 seconds the ball is too heavy for you. This can be a blow to your pride if you find that you cannot use that 16 pound ball you have and you have to go to a 15 pound or even 14 pound ball. Look at it this way, you will have a ball you can control better. There will be less stress on your wrist and fingers. A ball that is too heavy for you can make your wrist break back as you go into your forward swing. And you sure don't want that unless you don't mind losing revs. I use to use 16 pound equipment until I got older(soon to be 67). I use 14 pound balls now. I also use a wrist support because my wrist strength isn't that great. So if you have to get a lighter ball and you will probably enjoy the game more and have better scores. :cool:

Mudpuppy
11-06-2013, 04:46 PM
You know why I use a 16? Because they don't make a 17.

To build up wrist / arm strength try this: http://powerballs.com/?

Aslan
11-06-2013, 09:42 PM
Wait…you want to just lift the ball off the floor with your ball between the hand and the floor? Or are you talking about holding the ball out in front of you with a straight wrist (as if you're carrying a plate of food)?

Because I can hold it at my side with my wrist straight…no problem. But holding it out in front of you one handed?? Nobody would use a ball more than 8lbs.

According to Earl Anthony, "use the highest weight ball you can control."

e-tank
11-07-2013, 12:08 AM
Wait…you want to just lift the ball off the floor with your ball between the hand and the floor? Or are you talking about holding the ball out in front of you with a straight wrist (as if you're carrying a plate of food)?

Because I can hold it at my side with my wrist straight…no problem. But holding it out in front of you one handed?? Nobody would use a ball more than 8lbs.

According to Earl Anthony, "use the highest weight ball you can control."

lolwut

Hampe
11-07-2013, 06:42 AM
Aslan, he means curling your wrist at a 90 degree angle. Hold the ball normally and let your arm hang freely. Then curl your wrist up.....if you can't hold the ball like that for 5-10 seconds, it's too heavy.

bowl1820
11-07-2013, 08:58 AM
Okay here we go again, First kneeling isn't necessary.

The test is from Ron Clifton's article "WHAT WEIGHT BALL? COULD 14 LBS BE YOUR "SWEET WEIGHT"?
http://www.bowl4fun.com/ron/tip14.htm


Ron Clifton:
"The first thing I check when trying to pick a ball weight is the persons wrist strength. I have them hold the ball down by their side with their wrist relaxed. Then I ask them to cup their wrist forward. They should be able to hold that position for a slow count to 10 or the ball is too heavy."

http://www.bowl4fun.com/ron/TipGraphics/Relaxed2.jpghttp://www.bowl4fun.com/ron/TipGraphics/Cupped2.JPG

bowl1820
11-07-2013, 09:12 AM
Wait…you want to just lift the ball off the floor with your ball between the hand and the floor? Or are you talking about holding the ball out in front of you with a straight wrist (as if you're carrying a plate of food)?

Because I can hold it at my side with my wrist straight…no problem. But holding it out in front of you one handed?? Nobody would use a ball more than 8lbs."
Hammer is referring the Ron Clifton test I posted above.

But as there is a test similar to "Carrying a plate of food" it's from the bronze coaching manual.

One method is to have your athlete use the balls on the storage racks. The athlete needs to place the palm of the bowling hand facing the ceiling at about waist high. The forearm of the bowling arm is in a position that is 90 degrees from the torso of the body.
When placing a ball in the palm of the hand, look for a ball that will slightly push the hand downward. If the athlete has no problem holding a ball, it is too light. Conversely if the athlete has difficulty maintaining the hand and forearm at the 90 degree position it is too heavy. The ball that seems slightly heavy in most cases will feel fine once the ball has been drilled with the proper fit.



Aslan, he means curling your wrist at a 90 degree angle. Hold the ball normally and let your arm hang freely. Then curl your wrist up.....if you can't hold the ball like that for 5-10 seconds, it's too heavy.


So No holding the ball out in front of you, No 90 degree angle.

Just hold the ball for about 10 sec. in this position. if you can do that your basically good to go.
http://s5.postimg.org/9whr0e9fr/ball_weight_test.jpg

Remember None of the methods are totally accurate, they just give a person starting out a starting point for ball weight.

vdubtx
11-07-2013, 10:59 AM
Because I can hold it at my side with my wrist straight…no problem. But holding it out in front of you one handed?? Nobody would use a ball more than 8lbs.



lolwut

http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/28582/skinny_medium.jpg :D

Hampe
11-07-2013, 11:06 AM
So No holding the ball out in front of you, No 90 degree angle.

Just hold the ball for about 10 sec. in this position. if you can do that your basically good to go.
Sorry....should have been more specific. When I said hold the ball normally I meant with your fingers in the ball with your arm hanging freely at your side. And yea, I suppose 90 degrees is a bit too much :D

Aslan
11-07-2013, 06:43 PM
Actually, it's sorta difficult with my 15lb ball. I mean, I counted to 5 and my wrist wasn't shaking or anything...but it did feel heavy.

Not that this will deter me from using the 5 16lb balls I have undrilled in my closet...but I now am certainly more worried that 16 might be too heavy. Thanks ALOT HAMMER!! *$&^! I actually have decent size, build, biceps, and forearms as well as larger than average hands. But I have fairly tiny wrists. I think once I get "settled" into my mechanics and what type of ball I desire...I think 15lbs is probably gonna be the weight I'll stick with. If I ever get my next dream ball, the Brunswick Mystic Aura...I actually want to get it at 14lbs just because I want to see if I notice a difference in pin carry/control/etc...

Hammer
11-07-2013, 07:27 PM
Kneeling isn't necessary. It might be more comfortable for some people that never used a fingertip ball before.

noeymc
11-07-2013, 07:27 PM
my wrist is small but i am able to do it for 26 secs before failure but i also been bowling for 9years total + ive always lifted so that prob helped another way to build forum arm muscle is to take a stick with a rope tie a milk jog filled with water and roll the rop up then control it on its way down you may not be able to fill the jog up all the way at first but you will! =D good luck and good bowling

MICHAEL
11-11-2013, 09:29 AM
Its been 8 1/2 hours, and I still feel no strane with my 16lb Beatdown, drilled with the Tri Grip,,, I need to break for beackfast, so I imagine a 16lb'er is ok for me.
The article has me wondering if the lack of deflection that happens with the heavier balls, and the technology that makes even stronger, might just be what Tyrone mentioned to me over a year ago.

He is a big guy, looks like a football player. He said his average went UP, when he changed weight, going from a 16, to a 14! He is a cranker. hummm

this article seems to support the fact that a ball NEEDS some deflection, maybe that's what Tyrone was trying to get across to me!

I do have that plugged ball that my wife didn't have any luck with that's 14lbs! I had it plugged, its the Freight Train, and I did give it a run a while back and had a low 600 series with it. Maybe I will get it out again and see how it works again.

I swear,,, I have way too many balls.... talk about different grips, and drilling patterns on a ball, and sticking with ONE!! I can't even stick with one brand, or weight of ball! :rolleyes:

J Anderson
11-11-2013, 10:16 AM
I swear,,, I have way too many balls.... talk about different grips, and drilling patterns on a ball, and sticking with ONE!! I can't even stick with one brand, or weight of ball! :rolleyes:

Just think how bad it would be if you could throw with either hand!

MICHAEL
11-11-2013, 12:52 PM
Just think how bad it would be if you could throw with either hand!

YES J,,,, LOL,,, the sad thing is, "I CAN IMAGINE"!! LOL