
Originally Posted by
Aslan
Not a silly question. Amyers has suggested the same thing.
The answer is a bit long-winded (as my answers tend to be)...but it has to do with my progression system.
There are essentially TWO ways of approaching an "arsenal":
1) The benchmark/gut instinct system.
2) A "progression" system.
The first is more common and easier to understand...a bowler just has a variety of bowling balls, kinda knows what his/her "benchmark" ball is, and when lanes transition (or they get a gut feeling), they can move to a different ball and perhaps a different area of the lane.
The "progression" system starts with your strongest ball and works toward a weaker ball (as the lanes transition). The progression system is useful for bowlers that don't want to resort to their "B-Games" or "C-Games"...and they can generally stay in one area for most of the night. However, there are two types of "progressions"; the difference being whether or not you encounter "carrydown".
"Carrydown" is when oil is pushed up the lane, rather than simply soaked into balls. Carrydown used to be a significant factor in bowling and is less so now due to resin tending to "soak up" oil rather than push it around. While many modern bowling experts (like RobM) have all but dismissed the idea of "carrydown"; many pros still consider carrydown a factor and carrydown can be a factor if there are a number of bowlers not using reactive resin balls. Whether the pros that still believe in "carrydown" do so because even pro bowlers tend to stubbornly hold on to outdated ideas...or because it's still a factor...is an open debate.
So, regarding your question, being someone that considers carrydown a factor that I have to take into account....my progression isn't simply: strongest, weaker, weakest. My progression needs to be: strongest, weaker, stronger. In other words...I have to "flip" ball #2 and ball #3..because I need to not only battle transition, but also battle carrydown that usually develops after the lanes start to transition.
There's two reasons why my arsenal is entirely polished Pearls:
1) Most lanes I bowl on tend to be drier. Without surfaced balls....I'd have a problem bowling on some longer/higher volume patterns and would have to make surface adjustments. But, the only house anywhere near me that would even come close to being medium oil would be Irvine Lanes and I hardly ever bowl there.
2) I set up this arsenal attempting to keep some things constant so I could evaluate other specs/factors. So, all of these balls are pearl covers and have a 2.49 RG. And, although I've been experimenting lately with the surface, I usually surfaced each of them with Crown Factory Compound so they'd have similar surfaces (although different underlying surfaces).
I'm not opposed to using duller equipment...but earlier in my bowling "journey" I attempted to surface my way to success and learned the lesson of "balls rolling out"....a concept that was new to me at the time. Essentially, by trying to put a ton of surface on the balls and throw them on a THS...I got the opposite result that I was looking for...balls that didn't really hook at all...because they rolled out well before the pocket.
Like I said above...if I bowled on synthetics that put down heavier volumes or longer patterns...or in a sport/experience league...given my stroker classification...I'd certainly need to expand my arsenal to include some solids/surfaced balls.
The other factor to consider is the "mental side" of the game and confidence. We all have balls in our arsenals that we aren't necessarily confident in. In my first arsenal it was the Columbia300 Encounter. In my previous arsenal it was the Columbia300 Dark Encounter. In this arsenal it's the Ebonite Innovate. The Innovate "serves a purpose" as a sort of "band-aid" to get me from the Reax Pearl that I know I can throw well; but it's just too strong to use for more than 1-2 games...unless I want to spend the rest of the night shooting 10-pins. But I can't just skip the Innovate and go to the Scandal Pearl...because if there isn't any carrydown....the Scandal Pearl behaves alot like the Melee Jab I used to throw...and it'll get really "jumpy". And. some of that becomes "mental" where in the back of your mind you're thinking "Uh oh....I gotta switch to the Innovate....this is gonna suck." Then, you subconsciously do things like "try to make it hook" or try to put more hand in it, etc...
A long answer...but, as you saw in the other progression/arsenal discussion threads...a complicated topic.
Bookmarks