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Thread: Synthetic Pins

  1. #1
    Cranker JaMau24's Avatar
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    Default Synthetic Pins

    Does anybody's bowling alley use these Twister synthetic pins? I've never heard of them until I was just surfing Youtube. I don't know if the video distorts the sound a little or not, but that just sounds so much different when the ball hits the pins. I do think scores would improve using these pins though. I have no idea why this hasn't become the pins that almost every alley uses nowadays much like almost every alley uses synthetic lanes. Considering it would save them so much money and its USBC approved, you'd think it would be a no-brainer. Thoughts?


  2. #2
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    I've heard quite a bit of talk about the fact that a lot of 4 and 9 pins get left by righties with these pins. Solid pocket hits, as opposed to light pocket hits, are rewarded more with Twisters. I have never personally bowled with them, so I don't have any personal experience.
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  3. #3

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    they are a german company. To the best of my knowledge wood pins come from timber in N.America. I am a believer that we should be using other renewable oil based polymers. I'm not sure what twisters use but I bet its the black stuff. The only example company is what nature works provides here in america. We are paying up the rear for crude products instead of going wow the cost to make products from renewables though higher now shouldn't have the spiking costs of non renewables. If these Twisters are some corn or soy polymers my bad and props to them. Here's a link to nature work

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    High Roller got_a_300's Avatar
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    Our center just put in new pins wish I'd have known about these
    pins before the owner bought the wooden pins I would have tried
    to talk him into buying these synthetic ones instead.
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    Bowling God billf's Avatar
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    $127 a pin sounds expensive but then again, I have no clue what a wood pin costs.
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    High Roller got_a_300's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by billf View Post
    $127 a pin sounds expensive but then again, I have no clue what a wood pin costs.
    That price is for a set of 10 pins which would make them cost
    $12.70 per pin and the new wooden pins that our center bought
    costs $10.70 per pin and will have to be replaced after a couple
    of years. The synthetic pins will last for a lot longer time than any
    wooden pins will last so the cost would be a lot less in the long run
    by not having to replace them so often.

    LOL!!! at $127.00 per pin that would make a single lane with 20 pins
    in the rack cost $2,540 and a pair of lanes would be $5,080 dollars or
    more depending on how many extra pins are in the machine we have
    I believe it is 4 extra pins per machine so the would raise the cost to
    $3,048 per lane and $6,096 per pair of lanes.
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  7. #7
    Bowling God billf's Avatar
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    See, I thought it sounded way too expensive.
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  8. #8
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    The synthetic twister pins have been around for like 12 years or so. I dont think they really went over big because of several issues. While they may last longer, a lot of people told how they became dead after a year. Out range problems because of ridges on the bottoms and pin jams. They didnt fall the same as wood pins and of course cost.

    There were aso those who called them cheater pins, because scores went up with them. Also there seemed to be more splits with them.

    Of course they may have improved them now too.

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  9. #9

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    They sound awful....no please. I want my strikes to thunder....not sound like pouring milk on rice krispies.

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