BallReviews
Equipment Boards => AMF => Topic started by: DP3 on March 03, 2014, 02:57:31 AM
-
I found this ball at Goodwill for $7.99 and had to pick it up since it had hardly any track wear and had a span and thumb that felt really close for me. The pin is in line with the cg in a typical "stack leverage" drill, but the mass bias is about 3-4" above the pin and not below it in the typical 6 3/4" placement. I don't remember these balls coming like this and this ball is not marked as a blem. Has anyone seen a ball like this? I remember it being a superflex pearl resin, but this mass bias marking has me dumbfounded.
-
I remember Ebonite making a bunch of balls like that. I don't recall AMF doing that, but I was never interested in the Fusion series.
-
I remember the Ebonite bombs away cores as well. Those were in a 13 1/2" position from where the "normal" mass bias marking was. So in theory a pin over bridge, CG/Mass kicked right for a RH player would put the bombs away mass bias around the 10-11'o clock position. This one is straight up from the pin about 3-4 inches. I'm going to just throw it and take whatever reaction I get. It is what it is. I remember the Victory series, and Fusion Hook Monster balls having the same core and these were all marked with a traditional mass bias.
-
I remember the Ebonite bombs away cores as well. Those were in a 13 1/2" position from where the "normal" mass bias marking was. So in theory a pin over bridge, CG/Mass kicked right for a RH player would put the bombs away mass bias around the 10-11'o clock position. This one is straight up from the pin about 3-4 inches. I'm going to just throw it and take whatever reaction I get. It is what it is. I remember the Victory series, and Fusion Hook Monster balls having the same core and these were all marked with a traditional mass bias.
I think you're safe in any case. If I recall, the PSA strength was relatively low for this core, a minor modification of an upside down light bulb. I believe it was AMF's test core prior to the Nighthawk's asymmetric core (which also had a low PSA strength).