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Author Topic: Radical Inferno  (Read 25970 times)

admin

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Radical Inferno
« on: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM »
Technology
The Radical Inferno® is the first ball to take full advantage of Brunswick’s new Urethane casting machine.  The machine is part of a custom built “State-of-the-Art” room full of high-tech equipment that incorporates enhanced control over processing parameters.  This machine includes a sensor system that monitors temperatures, pressures and flow rates at every important point in the casting process.  Our new mixing head is multi-color and particle capable.  This all new system allows the Brunswick R&D team the unprecedented ability to fine tune bowling ball performance.

Octane Coverstock
Our new Urethane casting machine has enabled Brunswick to produce a new class of Reactive coverstock.  Octane coverstock is the result of 3 years of Research and Development into both materials technology and Urethane processing parameters.  The same meticulous screening of materials that produced the Activator coverstock family has now resulted in Octane.  Improved back-end traction with a sharper breakpoint, Octane is a perfect complement to the Activator coverstock balls known for their early revving ball reaction.  

Reaction Characteristics
The Radical Inferno is in the highly angular ball reaction class with a high traction breakpoint that is sharp, powerful and continuous.  With its high gloss polish surface the Radical Inferno gets down the lane and through the heads with ease.  What is unique about the Radical is its ability the make a sharp, continuous turn to the pocket with more traction at the breakpoint.  Our ball test group has commented at length about their ability to keep their speed up with the Radical Inferno, without the ball losing traction down lane in heavy oil or heavy carrydown.  The Radical is the best they have ever seen in a highly polished Brunswick ball.

Utility
•Out of the Box: With its High Gloss Polish finish the Radical Inferno will match up well on medium-dry to medium-oily conditions.
•When dulled: The Radical Inferno hooking action will increase and its arc will become more even, creating a better match-up for oily lane conditions and help blend the over/under reactions seen on wet/dry lane conditions.  The testing program for the Radical Inferno has identified two favored surface finishes.  One is the Factory Finish High Gloss Polish that is being used on the Radical.  The other is a dull, but very smooth surface typical of Scotch Bright White Pad or Abralon grits of 1000 or greater.  If you bowl on a lane condition where your Radical Inferno goes too long and struggles to make a strong backend move, Brunswick strongly recommends that you remove the polish from the ball with a burgundy Scotch Bright pad, or similar aggressive abrasive, then use the Grey and White Scotch Bright pads, or the 500 & 1000 grit Abralon pads to create a dull, but very smooth surface finish.

Coverstock
Octane Reactive
Color:  
Blue Pearl
Yellow Pearl
Chrome Pearl  
Hardness: 76-78
Glow Engraving
Factory Finish
High Gloss Polish
More Information

Core Dynamics
Two-component
Dynamically
Symmetrical core
RG Max: 2.513”  
RG Min: 2.463”
RG Diff: 0.050”
RG Avg: 2.6 out of 10
Performance
Hook Potential 135
Length 100
Breakpoint Shape 95
Available Weights
12-16 Pounds

 

tonykcgee

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #16 on: November 02, 2006, 11:55:06 AM »
Update Update

88th game update.  Hits good on dry, gives me high blood pressure in oil...trans fats = BAD

I think Brunswick held back and didn't tell us everything they can do in their new manufacturing plant.  I think they can install AI (Artificial Intelligence) into their new balls because THIS BALL HATES ME!

DRY

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #17 on: November 07, 2006, 06:25:38 AM »
Last week in Lithuania we had a guest from Brunswick, Tod Grams. He made a presentation of new balls.  I was tempted to participate at the presentation, and consequently bought my first ever Brunswick ball – Radical Inferno. Until now I adored Storm balls, which I have a pile of J.  It was especially pleasing that I scored 219 average with the new ball during a league game this week.  The lanes were medium oiled, so the ball had much more aggressive back-end and left much less Ten-Pin-Leaves, if compared with Storm Diablo, which I have been using until now.  So much for the news in Marry Land - Lithuania.

Bigmike

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #18 on: November 18, 2006, 09:19:27 AM »
Please see my profile for stat info.

Lay Out: Pin 5 x 4(75 deg)with a wt hole on my axis. The hole was initially small and was to remove side weight to make it legal, but has since been redrilled to be medium and deep enough to hit the core and alter the dynamics. I threw this box finish for a PBA regional tournament (pattern 3-38 feet) in the late games when the heads disappeared. I have since hit it with 2000 ABR and will probably take it down even more now.

What I have initally seen is a ball that is very smooth on the back and to me it reads less than my Rampage right now. I pull this out when the lane is broken down because it gives me hold area.

I am heading to the shop today to take it down to 360 ABR and then lightly hit it with Brunswick's Rough Buff (rubbing compound) to try to get it back to around 800 grit on the surface. I am hoping the good stuff that the regional and senior players in my area are talking about will show up with this surface adjustment. I will update this after I have done this.
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Mike Craig-Columbus, OH
"Tell me Cup, how does a great ball striker like you shoot an 83? Well I lipped out this putt on 18......"

Mike Craig - Storm Bowling Amateur Staff - Westerville, OH

Brandon Riley

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #19 on: December 13, 2006, 10:44:33 PM »
I've had my radical for a month now and have used it on a good variety of patterns.
Heres now it is set up: http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y125/A_Good86/Radical.jpg

I drilled the ball to finish hard.  Hoping that it would be good later in tournaments, allowing me to move deep when the lanes get dry and bite through carrydown.

In box finish there is no point in even trying it until the lanes have been worn in by a good 5-6 games.  Just too long and squirty in oil.  Problem is that even on dry lanes and carrydown the ball either burns up in the dry or doesn't finish hard enough in the carrydown to open up the lane or carry 10s.

I took it down to 1000 abralon and the reaction has improved greatly.  It is much more controllable and predictable.  The carry has improved greatly, and I can use it to bowl on a 2nd shift pattern and move in a bit.  This ball likes to roll up a lot in the dry and hits well, but still doesn't hit well if it is tugged in the oil.

Positives:  strong backend, gets downlane in a hurry on medium-dry conditions.
Negatives:  over/under in box finish!  Doesn't like carrydown.  The ball is not nearly as strong or angular as advertised.

Not a bad ball, but not great either.  It offers a very unique motion on the lanes because it rolls hard in the dry, but skids like no tomorrow in oil.  Not a ball that I would recommend for your typical house shot, but a condition ball that will be simply amazing on the right blended pattern.
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Brandon Riley
Brandon Riley
Brunswick Regional Staff

Typhoon 10

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #20 on: January 03, 2007, 03:22:30 AM »
I have been a die hard fan of Brunswick and their products for a long time. After purchasing the Radical I am considering changing my opinion. All I can say is this ball would make a great door stop if it was flat. After one month I gave it away...I felt guilty taking any amount of money from even an enemy. Shortly after Brunswick introduced the Radical, Storm introduced the Domination. In my first tournament using the Domination I rolled a 958 series (4 games)and I have used it ever since. Because of the Radical, I have now become a Storm fan. Brunswick....what were you thinking????????????

Flyin11

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #21 on: January 05, 2007, 10:34:36 AM »
14LBS 4oz
2-3" Pin Placement
About 3 1/2oz Top Weight
Pin Is Located To The Right Of My Ring Finger

Not sure why there are so many bad or different reviews for this ball...I guess it all depends on how you throw and how you use it. I did not sand down the ball or do anything like that like others have suggested..Don't have the means to do so anyways. Bowled with the Radical for the first time last night, straight out of the box finish, and my first 4 games were 214, 203, 213, 208, and I shot a 238 later on. Love the color on the ball and how it looks going down the lane!! The ball hit like a truck and I had about a foot of forgiveness area. My shot was pretty much like Brunswick's diagram above, maybe with the ball a little more inside of that line. It did just like it advertised...The backend was amazing and as radical as the diagram shows. I usually throw a 14LB Storm Trauma ER but the thing would not hook and couldn't get a decent shot so the Radical is my new favorite and the Storm might just stay in the bag from now on. The only dislikes I can say is that when the lanes do start to dry up some of the hits do become kind of flat. Then again, this ball isn't really made for dryer conditions from what I can tell. Looks more like a Medium-Heavy Oil ball to me. Bottom line for me is that I love this ball and will keep using it regularly. It's a awesome ball by Brunswick and I'm very pleased with it!! Thank you Brunswick!!!

Deep-pow-ski

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #22 on: February 01, 2007, 01:03:03 PM »
16lbs
2"pin
strong layout

This ball is my favorite brunswick ball I have ever owned.  It gets down the lane and has a strong arc to the pocket.  It is also very shot specific.  I only use this ball when I want to play down the boards and when there is enough oil outside.  This was supposed to be a really angular ball and it just is not for me.  It did however fit a need in my arsenal I wasn't even looking for.  When I run in to a tough condition where a swing shot is squirty I will be the only one who is scoring.  I shoot over 700 at least 75% of the time when this ball comes out of the bag.  There are a lot of people that apparently do not like this ball.  I can understand why!  Certain shots it just does not work it is all over/under reactions.  If I could only carry one ball this would not be it but it can fit in to an arsenal very nicely.  I would still take the black widow over the radical any day.  If you want a skid-snap ball go with a hammer product.  This is still a fantastic product by brunswick.  I just feel that Ebonite/Hammer are years ahead of brunswick in technology.

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #23 on: February 04, 2007, 05:49:50 PM »
The Radical is appropriately named. To me it defines skid/snap. That being said, I've adjusted the cover several times back and forth depending on lane conditions.

It is most versatile with some of the polish taken off; approximately 1000 abralon or wet sanded to about 1500. A white scotch-brite is comparable, too. Still very clean through the heads and nice backend angle.

The versatility of this ball is it's strength.

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Laneman

HasBeenOrNeverWas

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #24 on: February 05, 2007, 02:17:17 PM »
As always, context is king.  This is a versatile ball, probably not the first out of the bag, but lines up well with non-normal conditions, which is sort of how I had it drilled.  Pin above the bridge - about 2.5" from CG, which is above grip center.  I also took down the surface right away to about 2000 with polish.

Gets down the lane well.  With pin and CG placement, this ball does not overreact, but has a controllable flip, though not aggressive.  So far, I've only used it in practice, but it does well with drier lanes or burned up heads.  My game is a moderate power game and this ball works fine deep and tight or whenever I have to back off the ball and go straight.  I can stay right longer if I go straighter and this ball definitely stores enough energy to hit well in that condition.

Again, this is not the first ball out of the bag on a fresh or medium condition, but that's what I had in mind in the first place.
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-Russ
Back in it after 10 years away...

Note:  My belief is that these ball reviews will not mean much unless you have context regarding who's doing the review.  For that, please check my profile.

Arsenal:
Brunswick Danger Zone (original - one of only two balls I kept when I left the sport in '96).
Brunswick Radical Inferno
Columbia Action Packed
Storm Thunderstruck
Brunswick Total Inferno

RSalas

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #25 on: February 24, 2007, 06:14:18 PM »
Ball:  Brunswick Radical Inferno

Layout:

Pin 5” from PAP, above ring finger
CG on midline, ¾” to right of grip center
No XH

Initial Surface Preparation:

Box finish

Purpose:

To use as a “go-to” ball for house-type conditions where I either need additional length because of the deterioration of the fronts, or recovery on conditions where the track has broken down and I need to go more left-to-right.

Why this ball?

I’ve been watching and waiting with this particular slot in the tournament bag.  I recall the initial disappointment at the Radical, and the comments about its unpredictability, and thus I considered drilling either a Smokin’ Inferno or a BVP Rampage as a go-to ball.  However, as I started to see more and more Radicals in my league and at tournaments, I began to think that it might be the perfect fit.

Against the advice of two very knowledgeable people, I went with the 5” above layout, and I didn’t change the box finish.  I did this mainly because of past success with this layout in equipment with the original Inferno core design.  I still have an Absolute Inferno with this layout, and it’s been a very consistent performer for me.

Observations:

The Radical made its maiden voyage in a tournament at a center with an old wood surface, in the second squad after oiling.  The Radical seemed to be right at home there, as I had enough of a launchpad in front to keep the ball on line to the breakpoint, at which point it made a strong arc to the pocket.  Because of the strength of the arc, I did have to cheat left a bit and play more from the oil to the dry.  I did have to be careful not to keep the ball in the oil too long, or it would squirt and lose both its reaction and its hit.  Over the course of the two sets that I bowled, I found myself moving my feet frequently during the transition until the lanes finally reached equilibrium in the last game.  Despite having to stand in front of the ball return, I was still getting a clean reaction with great recovery, and the carry was phenomenal.

I also used the Radical at a tournament on lanes with synthetic fronts and old wood in back.  Because of the longer oil in the middle of the lane, I wanted to play the lane more direct, but the breakpoint was a bit touchy until the track broke down.  As a result, one shot would hit high-flush and leave a 9, and the next would hang a bit in the oil and leave a late 10.  I ended up conquering this over-under reaction by moving further left, softening the speed, and using more axis rotation, which made the ball go straighter in front but still react hard off of the break.

Conclusions:

For me, the Radical is to the lane conditions in 2007 what the original Inferno was to the lane conditions in 2003, with a few minor differences.  First, while I can use the Radical to play more direct, it doesn’t seem to thrive on tighter conditions the way the original Inferno did.  Second, the original Inferno seemed to have an inside limitation.  Once I got my feet past a certain point, the Inferno lost its ability to recover enough to kick the corners.  I don’t seem to have this problem with the Radical, though, for the more the lanes break down, the better it seems to get.  Third, what people have been saying about the Octane cover giving a different look at the pin deck seems to be spot on if my experiences have been any indication.  The Radical kicks out more 10s on marginal hits than any of my original Infernos ever did.
--------------------
...formerly "The Curse of Dusty," and "Poöter Boöf" before that...
#TweetYourScores

krazieracer51

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #26 on: March 18, 2007, 04:34:51 PM »
I bought this ball and had it drilled strong just to see what it could do and it did nothing it went straight im a cranker and i hate this ball it makes the turn but as soon as the core takes over it starts to rotate around the pin so someone gave me one cause he hated it so i took it and drilled it with a medium layout and still did nothing i contacted brunswick and i was told that its to strong of a ball for a strong handed player well all in all its turned me into a huge storm fan i drilled a storm pyro and that is a ball that reacts like the radical was suppose to but it never delivered i would not recommend this ball to anyone not even my enemies.  if you want a good quality ball get a storm or a columbia 300 best balls on the market

Freakin10pin

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #27 on: March 19, 2007, 08:29:38 AM »
Honestly, anyone who complains about this ball :

a.) Has the wrong surface for the condition.
 - OR -
b.) Has the wrong ball out for the condition.

I can see why people may complain about it but when used as it was intended, this thing KILLS the rack.

If an angular move is not your thing, then this ball is not for you.
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Righty
Speed: average 16.5 (Quibica)
Revs: med-high to high
Axis: 5-3/4" w/ 0' tilt ( hi-track )

See Profile for arsenal

Captain Stabbin

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #28 on: April 02, 2007, 04:05:33 PM »
I drilled up my Radical Inferno with the pin to the right of the ring, took the coverstock to 1000 grit, and put some extra polish on it. This ball doesn't hook a ton, but if you play a tight outside line, this ball is awesome.
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Captain Stabbin

LeoAnalyn

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #29 on: April 04, 2007, 02:51:29 PM »
Finally! I completed all of the Inferno ball. I have no plan of getting the Radical since I heard a lot of love and hate about it but I just got a good deal getting a used one with the same span and drilled same as I wanted. After the span adjusted.  Wow! this ball is perfect! For high Rev bowler you got to love this. This ball roll similar to my Favorite or Go To ball Blazing Inferno. If you love the Retired Blazing then Radical is a great compliment.

Jepp114

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Re: Radical Inferno
« Reply #30 on: April 23, 2007, 03:20:53 PM »
Inverted PAP 3 1/2" 1/4" down
Tweener
15# 2oz, 2.9TW, 0" pin
OOB surface
3 3/4" ptp, 315° layout, pin ended up under ring finger.
no balance hole, fingers drilled deep.
slightly heavier THS, and sometimes more oil with no strip on top of the first shift (lots of carrydown).
Synthetic
standing 27, 15 at the arrows and around 5 at 45'.

Pin-Action is amazing. Light hits shred the rack, messengers are plentiful. If you try to play straighter with this expect alot of stone 8's and 9's because it is saving way too much energy. I've tried playing up the boards with this with highspeed and normal delivery and that's what you get. To play up 10 with this ball you have to really back off the release as well as stay behind the ball to get into a roll, otherwise keeping the same speed and putting some sideroll will get you a brooklin or 2 pin. This ball's strength really comes out when playing through the oil into the dry. Carry down is only a problem if the carrydown is right at the breakpoint, but as soon as it makes its turn, carrydown is ignored, so you can slow it down and let the ball react. There is a lot of love/hate with this ball, but for me I'm on the love side, this is a great ball, see for yourself: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXo_t9Q1GyU