For me, pin up and pin down does make a difference.
Hammer Purple Urethane. Storm Surge Hybrid, Storm Pitch Purple, Roto Grip Hyper Cell.2 Storm Surge Pearl 4x4x2 and a no flare, ,Roto Grip Hot Cell, Roto Grip Haywire.
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There are balls made today that have a pancake weight block.
If I take a 4 oz top weight ball, and drill the CG on my axis, then drill a big hole on the negative axis, I can create probably 7+ ounces of side weight.
I could kick that ball down the lane and have it hook a bunch.
Static weights doesn't mean as much on balls with a highly dynamic core, but not all balls fall into that category.
Who throws a pancake weight block other than a spare ball? Statics have to be less than 1oz side, finger or thumb. Top or bottom weight has to be less than 3oz to be legal. Statics mean very little to ball reaction period. Moving the mass in a pancake weight block can actually alter differential and that has a greater effect on ball motion than statics.
I throw a pancake weight block ball for strikes.
With the rev rate I can throw consistently, reactive resin balls give me a significant over reaction.
It is harder to learn to go from 600 rpm down to 300 rpm and repeat that consistently, than it is to learn to go from 150 rpm up to 300 rpm consistently.
So until I can unlearn how to rev the ball, I'm stuck with urethane balls, at high revs.
The point is some people think the USBC should do away with static limits, because they have such small effect on a modern cored ball.
If they did away with static limits, a ball with 7 ounces of side weight would be legal.
I would have responded directly to RobM but he takes all of my responses as a personal attack.
[QUOTE=channelsurfer;121410]Who throws a pancake weight block other than a spare ball? Statics have to be less than 1oz side, finger or thumb. Top or bottom weight has to be less than 3oz to be legal. Statics mean very little to ball reaction period. Moving the mass in a pancake weight block can actually alter differential and that has a greater effect on ball motion than statics.[/QUOTE
There are many sport patterns now that urethane works well on due to a smaller volume in the fronts or distance of pattern being shorter. There are several of the kegel patterns and wtba patterns fitting that senario.
There are very few pancake weight block urethane balls available today. Even so statics do VERY LITTLE to overall ball reaction.
http://www.bowlingboards.com/threads...-Part-IV/page2
So Mike White are you the guy in the green shirt in the video on that page? Just guessing since that is the highest rev rate in the video. How did you figure your rev rate at 600 rpm's? 300 rpm's is probably closer to your rev rate. Why in the heck would you need a pancake weight block or urethane on 99% of the THS around?
And if you are referring to RobLV1 as Rob M........He gets it and understands ball motion. As he said...... ambient temp and humidity has more effect on ball motion than static weights.
This video was taken near April 1st, I had just reinjured my elbow on about Feb 20th, so I wasn't throwing revs that day.
This is a more upto date video. Even in this video there was more oil, and less lane friction than I usually bowl on, but I'm still using urethane because resin balls would snap too sharp.
Last edited by Mike White; 12-12-2014 at 08:17 PM.
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