View Full Version : Is it easy to screw up your ball by resurfacing it yourself?
Blomer
03-30-2016, 07:25 PM
Last night someone resurefaced two of my bowling balls. Well, at least he used the pads and made them dull and then stuck on int he machine and it looked and moved like it did out of the box. He did it to my Haywire as well and got the shine out and i has new life. My question is, with me never doing this myself, is it easy to screw it up and mess up the ball beyond repair? He said it's easy to resurface the ball. Is it? What are the steps? Why type of pads should I buy? I see there are several different numbers, which are best to use?
Thanks!
bowl1820
03-30-2016, 08:08 PM
Surfacing a ball yourself is easy with a little practice. You can't mess it up beyond repair, if you get the wrong surface on it, you just do it again.
What are the steps? what they are depend just on what you want to do at the time. At the most basic level you start with a course grit and go finer with each following step .
What supplies do you need? While there's many different products, the basic's are Abralon pads going from 500 up to 4000 grit and usually a bottle of polish.
Having a spinner is best, but you can do basic surfacing by hand.
A good low cost compromise is the Smart tool from Polish Your Ball.
http://www.polishyourball.com/
Here's a resource with some good info
Bowlers Grit Chart
http://home.earthlink.net/~litefrozen/downloads/bowling_grit_chart_v2.pdf
fokai73
03-30-2016, 08:36 PM
The hand drill attachment is a good start. But it's always better to get a vertex $199 spinner or other spinners. I had mine for about 10 years and still going.
The key to sanding is knowing the grit numbers and strength, don't use so much pressure, timing, and practice on a old ball first. These are a few things to know.
Once you learn to use the spinner, you will save money on new balls lol
Mike White
03-30-2016, 09:43 PM
Last night someone resurefaced two of my bowling balls. Well, at least he used the pads and made them dull and then stuck on int he machine and it looked and moved like it did out of the box. He did it to my Haywire as well and got the shine out and i has new life. My question is, with me never doing this myself, is it easy to screw it up and mess up the ball beyond repair? He said it's easy to resurface the ball. Is it? What are the steps? Why type of pads should I buy? I see there are several different numbers, which are best to use?
Thanks!
I wouldn't say it is easy to screw up the ball, but I had a few people bring a ball into the shop who must have put some serious effort into doing so.
I think some of these people confused scotch pad
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41ObYejBAxL.jpg,
with one of these
http://www.webstaurantstore.com/images/products/main/60227/145886/stainless-steel-standard-weight-scouring-pads-12-pack.jpg
fokai73
03-30-2016, 10:21 PM
I wouldn't say it is easy to screw up the ball, but I had a few people bring a ball into the shop who must have put some serious effort into doing so.
I think some of these people confused scotch pad
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41ObYejBAxL.jpg,
with one of these
http://www.webstaurantstore.com/images/products/main/60227/145886/stainless-steel-standard-weight-scouring-pads-12-pack.jpg
I know it may be rude... BUT THAT RIGHT THERE IS FUNNY! HAHAHA
Aslan
03-31-2016, 12:32 PM
I have.
My early generation ball dehydrator...had plastic trays...made for drying fruits and meat. It turns out, when they get heated up...they don't support the weight of a bowling ball...and direct exposure of the ball to the metal heating elements WILL melt into your ball.
I also tried to use a hand drill to polish one ball...lets just say it doesn't really work as good as an actual ball spinner....the moving metal parts of the drill tend to damage the ball...plus it gives you an uneven surfacing.
AlexNC
03-31-2016, 01:31 PM
I have 2 local shops that don't charge me anything to use their spinner when I am using my own pads/polish. Its not a full resurface that I am talking about obviously, but its easier to get a better result every 10 games or so than trying by hand or using one of the gimmicky drill attachment deals.
Aslan
03-31-2016, 05:03 PM
I'm hoping to find a cheap, used ball spinner on Ebay or something. The new ones are just too much money ($199-$299). I figure eventually I'll find one that a shop is selling or something.
I could probably buy the parts and put one together myself...it's not rocket science to make a motor that spins something...but I just fear I'll get 1/2 to 3/4 of the way through building it and end up getting sidetracked...then i'll have yet another project sitting in my living room partially finished.
Not to mention the lesson I learned building the bowling ball rack...what seemed like a money saving project became 2-3x as expensive as just buying one. DOHT!!
NewToBowling
03-31-2016, 05:11 PM
You need a GF to help you with these DIY projects. Think Demi and Patrick Swayze pottery scene in Ghost
Aslan
04-01-2016, 01:02 PM
You need a GF to help you with these DIY projects. Think Demi and Patrick Swayze pottery scene in Ghost
Yeah. Because nothing screams "SEXY" like sexual realtions on a workbench covered in motor parts.
http://r.fod4.com/http://a.fod4.com/images/user_photos/1243568/bdb2116a3d2725d067fd6d77f8741c29_original.jpg
Sadly, some of our neighbors to the South are reading that and getting excited.
http://giantgag.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/giantgag.com-funny-redneck-murders-are-hard-to-solve-01.jpg
vdubtx
04-01-2016, 01:57 PM
Looks like someone used the steel wool on this ball. LOL
https://scontent-sjc2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/v/t1.0-9/12321522_10206172184719893_1684744040309880104_n.j pg?oh=9f357452be58ad4fa13888aee4d4934e&oe=57BF005C
Mike White
04-01-2016, 02:29 PM
Looks like someone used the steel wool on this ball. LOL
https://scontent-sjc2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/v/t1.0-9/12321522_10206172184719893_1684744040309880104_n.j pg?oh=9f357452be58ad4fa13888aee4d4934e&oe=57BF005C
"My ball is skidding too far, and not hooking, I'll rough it up".
Now it skids for 5 feet, hooks for 2 feet, and rolls for 53 feet.
Woohoo good times.
Langdoj
04-01-2016, 04:35 PM
Looks like someone used the steel wool on this ball. LOL
https://scontent-sjc2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/v/t1.0-9/12321522_10206172184719893_1684744040309880104_n.j pg?oh=9f357452be58ad4fa13888aee4d4934e&oe=57BF005C
Lol I did something very similar to this to a storm frantic I had. I just got abralon pads for the first time and was a little rough with the 360 grit I had. Nothing my PSO couldn't fix. Of course now I know what to do :D
billf
04-04-2016, 01:25 AM
The bigget mistake I've seen is people thinking regular sandpaper grit and abralon pad grit were the same.
Biggest mistake I've made was when I first started and didn't realize that Storm's 1500 grit polished was actually 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 and Storm Step Two for certain times. Ball rolled out before it could read the midlane.
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