John Brodersen
09-25-2011, 08:50 PM
Ball specs – 15 lbs 1 oz, 3.15 top weight, 3 3/8-inch pin.
The Critical Theory was drilled using the dual angle method. The layout is a 4 ˝ inch pin, 50-degree drill angle and a 40-degree VAL angle. An x-hole was not needed. Using Storm’s layout terminology the layout would be 4 ˝ by 4 1/8 with a 2 ˝ pin buffer. The cover was left OOB which is 4000 abralon.
The first thing you will notice about the Critical (which is a pearl) is that the cover comes dull from the factory. This will allow it to handle heavy and medium-heavy patterns. The Critical had a great mid-lane read, made a medium-strong move down lane with great continuation. Hit and carry were very, very good. The Critical is a little longer and a little stronger down lane that the original Theory.
Keep the Critical on some oil and you’ll be striking often
John Brodersen
379
The Critical Theory was drilled using the dual angle method. The layout is a 4 ˝ inch pin, 50-degree drill angle and a 40-degree VAL angle. An x-hole was not needed. Using Storm’s layout terminology the layout would be 4 ˝ by 4 1/8 with a 2 ˝ pin buffer. The cover was left OOB which is 4000 abralon.
The first thing you will notice about the Critical (which is a pearl) is that the cover comes dull from the factory. This will allow it to handle heavy and medium-heavy patterns. The Critical had a great mid-lane read, made a medium-strong move down lane with great continuation. Hit and carry were very, very good. The Critical is a little longer and a little stronger down lane that the original Theory.
Keep the Critical on some oil and you’ll be striking often
John Brodersen
379