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Author Topic: Rattler  (Read 15290 times)

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Rattler
« on: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM »
Ball NPS Score: Not Available
Coverstock: Activator
- Ball Color: Indigo Pearl / Ivory All colors do vary somewhat from the picture shown.
- Ball Finish: High Gloss Polish
- Hook Potential: 125 (Medium-High) on a scale of 10-175 Low-High
- Length: 110 (Medium) on a scale of 25-235 Early-Late
- RG Differential: 0.043 (Medium) on a scale of 0.0-0.080 Low-High
- RG Average: 2.539 (Medium-Low) on a scale of 2.43-2.80 Very Low-High Break Point
- Breakpoint Shape: 85 (Angular) on a scale of 10-100 Arced-Angular
- Recommended Lane Conditions: Most house conditions
- A few tiny pit holes in the cover stock of the ball are normal
- Description: The Rattler strikes, and strikes, and strikes again. With a ball reaction like a snake attacking its prey, the Rattler uncoils and drives hard and fast through the backend with a vicious attack. The Rattler provides unmatched reaction at the performance price point. Don''''t be caught without one in your bag.
Technology
Activator® Coverstock: The Rattler is the first ball with Activator coverstock available at the performance price point. The original Activator coverstock used on the Rattler is a proven formula that provides strong downlane recovery, longevity of ball reaction, and undprecendented durability with superior resisitance to cracking.
Low RG Rocket Core: The Rattler uses Brunswick’s Multi-Sided Rocket Core System, providing a low RG core that when combined with the original Activator produces a ball reaction that is unmatched at the performance price point. Clean through the front with an aggressive move at the breakpoint, the Rattler gives amazing bang for the buck. There isn''''t another ball in this class that''''s even close.
High Gloss Finish: The Rattler is finished with Brunswick''''s Factory Finish High Gloss Polish to maximize the skid-snap reation out of the box. This surface preparation will allow most bowlers to match-up to both freshly oiled and moderately broken down house conditions.

 

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #1 on: January 16, 2009, 03:10:05 PM »
Layout - Rico  

So far I've been able to use the Rattler at two different centers, both of which have a decent amount of oil. Even with the control layout I found this ball to offer easy length through the heads and a HUGE move on the backend, as long as it found some friction.

On a second shift league as the heads started to dry up this ball allowed me to move way left and throw outside right and it came back to the pocket with ease. The cover and core seem to be an excellent match with outstanding value at the price point. This ball will outperform many that retail at a much higher price.  

Up to now the Swarm has been a favorite since day one. This ball is a nice addition to the line-up because it offers a little more length and a more abrupt angle to the pocket. Probably the most angular Brunswick ball that I've thrown. Great job Brunswick!


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Lane Carter, Strike Zone Pro Shops - Salt Lake City, Utah
Brunswick Amateur Staff
www.brunswickbowling.com

RSalas

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #2 on: January 19, 2009, 10:32:23 PM »
Ball: Brunswick Rattler

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 fill the medium/benchmark spot in the tournament bag.  I have a Fury Pearl in this spot now, but it tends to wobble in the midlane, and the Octane cover wants to break down the lane condition too quickly.  I’ve tried my Copperhead in this spot, but in box finish, it burns too quickly to make the turn down lane, and with polish, it tends to be too pushy in the midlane.

Why this ball?

With an Activator cover and the Rocket core, and an advertised hook rating between those of the Copperhead and Swarm, this ball seemed like a natural as a bench piece.

Observations:

I’ve thrown the Rattler twice in a second-shift league on at a center with fairly new Pro Anvilane, and I was surprised at just how clean the ball was through the front part of the lane, and how smooth the transition was between skid and hook.  For one of those weeks, we drew a pair that broke down quickly, and I was able to bump left with the Rattler and still have that clean look in front, as well as enough recovery to generate carry angle.

I also got the chance to throw the Rattler in a tournament at a center with HPL in front and older wood in back.  With this layout and surface preparation, it was a touch too pushy through the midlane and too abrupt at the break on the fresh.  However, once the oil started to push, and the fronts started to go, the Rattler came into its own.  I could ride the oil line to the pocket, and when I did leak one to the right, it didn‘t bounce off of the friction.

Most recently, I bowled a tournament with the Rattler on older Murrey synthetics, on a “Holiday tree” pattern to which an out-of-bounds had been added.  Again, when the pattern was fresh, the Rattler wanted to push too far to read the dry, and on moving to where there was more friction, I got too strong of a reaction.  So it stayed in the bag until the second block, when the track had started to break down some.  The Rattler was then in its element, as the nature of the transition was such that a more direct angle to the pocket would yield better carry.  So I kept my target near the track, moved it left as the transition continued, then made lateral moves until the transition slowed down, and I was able to keep the pocket and maintain carry.

Conclusions:

The first few times I threw the Rattler, I made the mistake of cheating to the left when I lined up with it, as I thought I’d get a stronger Inferno-like reaction off of the break.  Instead, the reaction that I got was more reminiscent of balls like the Zones from the late 1990s (the Sapphire solid and the Speed in particular), where the ball would clear the front part of the lane, and then pick up gradually yet continuously from the midlane through the pin deck.  The other thing that I liked about these two Zones in particular was the way I could get my feet a little bit further right, keep the ball in the oil a little bit longer, and “stop” the ball at the pocket.  I couldn’t do this with the Infernos because of how strong they tended to want to read the back, but I can do this with the Rattler.

While I strongly suspect that the Wild Ride will be the more popular of the two new releases, I believe that the Rattler will be the more useful of the two for most bowlers.  It reads the lane consistently, reacts predictably, is forgiving with minor misses in my release, and still packs enough pop to carry corners.

NOTE:  The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer and not of Brunswick Corporation.

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Ray Salas
Brunswick Amateur Staff
http://www.brunswickbowling.com
#TweetYourScores

PremierBowlersProShop

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2009, 06:21:59 PM »
www.premierbowlers.com
Lane Conditions: Medium-Light Oil
Typical Conditions: Variety of Shots
Type of Lane: Combination
What part of the lane did you play? Second Arrow
Did the ball track out? Normal
Weight of bowling ball: 15
Surface of bowling ball: Factory/Box
Likes: Gets through the front part of the lane with easy and creates a strong angular motion in the backend.
Dislikes: Does skid a little to far untill lanes break down but that's exactly what the ball is supposed to do.

Overall the Rattler is an excellent bang for the buck. Clears the front part of the lane and creates an aggressive angular break point. Rev dominate or slower ball speeds will love with the length it can create, speed dominate players will tend to think it goes to long and would be best used on drier lanes. Don’t be afraid to alter the Activator Cover it’s very versatile and can be polished or sanded with ease.

Rattler Lay Out: 4 X 4 Pin ½ above ring finger No xhole.
Starting Weights: 15.5, 3.1 Top

Compared to my Bag:

Angular One 3 3/8 X 4:
Angular One starts a couple inches earlier but is a little stronger on the back ended. I was able to play about 5 to 8 boards left of the Rattler, but both had very Angular and Strong Break Points.

Inferno 4 x 4 Pin below ring finger:
The original Inferno gets in to a roll a touch earlier but has more backend the Inferno also is a little bit smoother at the break point. Rattler would make a

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"Practice doesn''t make perfect, perfect practice makes better."

Corey C

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #4 on: January 25, 2009, 10:50:55 PM »
5" pin to PAP below fingers
XH 2 1/4" down the VAL 2" Deep 7/8" hole size
OOB Finish

Even before drilling we knew this layout was going to need a weight hole. I threw it before we drilled the XH and the flare rings were very tight with almost no flare. We decided to only go 2.25" down the VAL to keep some stability. I didn't want another "house shot" reaction.

The Rattler with this layout goves me a very controllable arcing backend reaction. The cover is very clean allowing me to keep the angles tight.

On our fresh house shot I could play closer to the friction, and on a burnt out shot, the arc reaction helped to control the backend, while the cover got the ball to the breakpoint.

I really like that they put Activator on this core. You get high end quality at performance series price! The color scheme also looks pretty cool going down lane.
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Corey Clayton
Brunswick Amateur Staff
Turbo Grips Staff
Team Canada 2007, 2008, & 2009
The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer and not of Brunswick Corporation
Corey Clayton
Brunswick Regional Staff
Turbo Staff

Dwight Albrecht

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #5 on: January 26, 2009, 04:34:26 PM »
Brunswick Rattler
Ball Specs
The ball being drilled was a 3” pin out with 3.00 oz top weight.
Drilling: Pin 4" from PAP and Mb 45 degrees from PAP, 30 degrees V.A.L. Line DUAL ANGLE. Pin is above ring finger. Weight Hole on my axis. Factory Polished.

Bowler Information:
Track diameter is 10 1/2.
PAP is measured at 5 1/4 over and 3/8" up.
Average ball speed (foul line to head pin) is 16 mph.
Axis rotation is typically 90 degrees
Initial rev rate is typically 300 rpm, "Tweener"
Lane Condition and Pattern:
Bowlero Lanes, HPL 9000 Panel. Oil Pattern: THS condition medium oil outsides, heavier oil inside, semi clean backends.

Review:
In a nutshell, a "Match Up" of proper cover stock and weight block working together in great unison to produce a definite winner. This ball will go down as one of the best reactions for the money that Brunswick has offered in this price point ever. Activator cover stock and rocket core make this ball a no brainer. Great clean skid through the front part of the lane with a strong change of direction down lane and very hard hit ability through the pins. One word "Bravo" Brunswick you did good on this one. 1-10 Scale for Overall Hook. 5 Backend Reaction 9. Thanks for reading my review.
Dwight

devildog819

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #6 on: January 28, 2009, 11:41:03 PM »
RH Bowler
Tweener
Ball Speed - 15 mph

I have only used this ball for a couple of pot games so far.  This ball was drilled 5 x 4 with no weight hole.  The ball reaction was predictable thru the heads and the backend move was strong off the breakpoint and continuous thru the pins.  Though both balls use the Rocket Core, I personally like this ball over the Copperhead.  I am certain the reason why is the Activator coverstock....I have another that I am going to drill up but I have no idea how yet...So far, another winner from Brunswick.

Roger Harley, Jr.
Brunswick Pro Shop Staff
USBC Certified Coach
Red Nelson's Bowlers World

TWOHAND834

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #7 on: February 01, 2009, 09:08:54 PM »
My Specs:  18 MPH, 540 rev rate, 5 1/2 x 0 PAP, 30 degree axis rotation

Rattler:  16#, 3 inch pin, 1.5 ounces top weight

Layout:  60 by 4 1/2 on Mo's Dual Angle Layout, weight hole at P2


Review:  This ball was drilled this way because I spoke to Tour Exempt player Jason Sterner about this ball, and he stated that the first one he drilled peeled too hard off the spot for his liking.  Our rev rates are similar, so I made sure not to put a skid/flippish type layout in it.  I drilled the ball similar to a Visionary ball I have that is clean through the heads and pretty rolly on the backend.  I got exactly what I wanted and then some.  I threw the Rattler on a broken down second shift league.  The track was fairly dry and therefore forced to play deeper in the lane.  The ball was money.  I played between 23-25 at the arrows all night.  If I was closer to 23 and got the ball a touch wide into the track area, it did not over react but made a controlled move on the backend.  If I was closer to 25 and kept the ball tighter on line, due to the Activator cover, it read the midlane and held line into the pocket.  They say that coverstock is 70% of ball reaction.  Since it has the same Activator cover as the Inferno, I wanted to get a comparison of the two.  Compared to the Inferno, the Rattler is cleaner through the first 30 feet but then the last 30 feet definitely reminds me of the Inferno.  The backend reaction, with my layout, gives me that strong, continuous motion that the Inferno has.  The difference that I see is the first 30 feet.  Rattler is definitely cleaner.  I am sure with a different layout, I could get more angularity on the backend.  However, I got what I wanted with this layout.  I am extremely impressed with the Rattler.  If you loved the Infernos, this ball is a must.  I give this a perfect 10 out of 10 since the result was perfect 1st game out of the box (300).
--------------------
Steven Vance
Pro Shop Operator
Striking Results Pro Shop
Red Carpet Lanes
Duluth (NE Atlanta), Georgia

If anyone out there is worried about the scores being too high, try duckpin!!
Steven Vance
Former Pro Shop Operator
Former Classic Products Assistant Manager

BrunsWolf

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #8 on: February 04, 2009, 06:41:10 PM »
Ball:
15# Rattler
5” pin
2.5 TW

Layout:
80* by 4.5” by 30*
OOB

Bowler Stats:
18 mph
350-400 rpm
Axis: 4 7/8” > by  0^

Lane Conditions:
39’ THS on Pro-Lane
19.2 uL
8:1 ratio

As soon as this ball’s information was released, I knew it would be a great compliment to the Smash Zone (read my review on that for further info). Good to see that my idea was correct.

The Activator cover made this ball a must have for me. I’ve always scored well with pearl covers with low RG cores.

I drilled this ball to go with my favorite Smash Zone. The rattler is drilled with a 1” stronger pin placement with a lot more height from the midline. It is stronger than my Smash Zone with a lot more “pop” to it. My line on the THS was a comfortable 17 (laydown) to 8 at the breakpoint. (Reminder that my forward roll lets me play straighter angles). When pulled inside, it held line nicely and glided to the breakpoint. When thrown out, it came roaring back. Not once did I have to worry about this ball flipping and turning the corner. I was able to play about 4 boards futher inside than with my Smash Zone.

Moving in further and changing to a stronger release, I had to make sure the ball stayed in some oil to save up energy for the pins. A weaker drilling would work better IF I wanted to throw it more into the dry. Now when the Smash isn’t enough for a condition, I know I have this ball to go too. Or the other is true and the Rattler becomes too much and I need to step down to the Smash. These two balls go so well together that I don’t know what I’d do if I had one and not the other.

The Rattler keeps the Inferno type reaction alive and that’s all I could ever ask for from this ball!

By the way, this ball is just looks good sitting on the rack!

--------------------
Brunswick Advisory Staff

Jared Wolf
Jonesboro, AR
http://brunswick802.bowlspace.com/
www.bowlingchat.net
Jared Wolf
Jonesboro, AR
Brunswick Advisory Staff

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer and not of Brunswick Corporation.

heavyarty

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #9 on: February 04, 2009, 09:32:29 PM »
Ball
15# Rattler
2.0 TW
3in pin

Layed out using dual angle

55x6 1/2 x45
oob finish

Bowler stats
16.5 mph
300-350 rev rate
30 degree axis rotation
4 3/8 x 1/4 up axis point

Basically the ball allows the bowler with proper axis rotation to play anypart of the lane. i had this ball drilled up this way so ill be able to play ontop of the friction on the THS. practiced a couple of games with it and so far it's doing what i intended it to do. nice recovery from multiple angles. although the oob is a little jerky when it encounted oil in the middle part of the lane. maybe ill try rough buff. but overall it has very nice continuation in the backend and extremely clean through the head area
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Current League Arsenal:
Copperhead- Rico, 500 grit w/ big b polish
Twisted Fury- 5 1/2 x 5 1/2.oob
Smash Zone- 4 1/2 x 4, rough buff
Avalanche Slide- 4 3/4 x 5- oob
Avalanche Solid 4 1/2 x 3 pin under- oob
Tzone
Current Arsenal-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/117991514@N05/
Vivid
Modern Marvel
Marvel Pearl
Crossroad
Iq tour pearl
natural

Balls in Home Bag
Defiant, Hyroad,Nano,Hyroad,Fringe

baer300

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #10 on: February 06, 2009, 03:26:59 PM »
Drilled this ball 45*x5x25* and put 4000 abralon on it. This ball has a tremendous back end reaction. I use this ball usually on the broken down patter as it glides through the heads a little better then the Wild Ride for me. mostly because I have 2000 on the WR. The Rattler is eveything Brunswick says it is, a very strong pearl with a flip on the backend. The ball has some great carry. This is a great all around ball, when drilled properly you can use it on anything. Everyone will love this ball, don't get caught without this one.
--------------------
BRUNSWICK ADVISORY STAFF
VISE REGIONAL STAFF
Adam Baer
Track Regional Staff
Vise Regional Staff

HeavyD

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #11 on: March 24, 2009, 07:41:14 PM »
15lbs
3-4 in Pin
TW Just under 3oz

I am a med to high rev player, @ 18mph, with a fairly high track. I drilled this ball with the pin about 5 in from my PAP above my ring finger. CG is kicked out so the Mass Bias(in theory) would be about 2 in right of my thumb. The cover is OOB. On my THS the ball goes a little long, so I put it away right from the start and would bring it back out on a broke down shot that is available in another league I bowl. As I thought, I was correct. Shot 239, 248, and 259 for a 746. First set on the lanes, ball is awesome!!!!! Carries the world for me and am looking forward to throwing it again soon. Just punched a Maxxx Zone as well and will post a review for that when I am able to find enough oil for it.

joshs

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #12 on: April 23, 2009, 01:10:47 PM »
Drilled this gem up with the pin 1 1/2 in. above my middle finger and the cg slightly to the right of my center of grip.  

I will start my post by saying this is my favorit of the 7 brunswick balls i've drilled over the last couple months.  

Give me great midlane read with a strong even arc on the backend.  I started this ball out with 4000 surface and the reaction blew away all my other stuff.  Threw 822/814/300 in three weeks with it.  

I then added some polish to it, and the results were still the same...only about 5 boards weaker.  

This is my go to ball and usually the 1st one out of the bag to read the lanes with.
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"Every Strike brings me closer to my next homerun"

strikingresults-atl

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #13 on: May 09, 2009, 03:27:29 PM »
I drilled the Rattler with the pin 4 x55x20 with no weight hole and with the surface sanded to 4000 abralon and magic shine.The rattler is very clean through the fronts and reads the midlane with a very smooth ball reaction.This ball can be used multiple ways for me.I can play out and play pretty straight or i can move in once the pattern breaks down and i have some friction to feed it to.Overall a very nice piece that is very smooth.
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Dannial Cohen
 
www.strikingresultsatl.com
 

Brunschick

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Re: Rattler
« Reply #14 on: May 15, 2009, 01:46:44 PM »
This ball has turned in to my "go to" ball. I currently have two of these drilled:

One pin in the ball with 2000 abralon surface that I tend to use on the fresh medium oil patterns.
The other is pin above the ring finger with some shine that I use on dryer conditions to player straighter up the lane. This layout gives me a sharper backend allowing me to play further right.

I am a fan of this ball and always know pretty much how it's going to react. Definitely an addition to anyone's arsenal that is lacking that "go to" ball.