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Author Topic: Bringing a Bowling Ball Back to Life  (Read 25428 times)

GQbowler

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Bringing a Bowling Ball Back to Life
« on: March 24, 2018, 11:59:27 AM »
I went to my local Pro Shop a while ago and picked up a Hy-road Nano. At first, the bowling ball had great hook potential and drove through the pins nicely. Currently, I am at about 100 games on the ball and I am having a hard time getting the ball to move anywhere near where it used to. What should I do? Get a resurface, or an oil extraction or both? How do I know when I need one or the other?

 

spmcgivern

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Re: Bringing a Bowling Ball Back to Life
« Reply #16 on: May 17, 2019, 03:27:38 PM »
My understanding of Hybrid bowling balls is the appearance has nothing to do with the performance.

A pearl bowling ball has reactive coverstock with an additive added to give it "pearl" performance characteristics.  How much of the additive will be decided by the manufacturer to give the desired performance. 

Now let's say you added 10 units of an additive to a reactive coverstock and now you have a solid and pearl of a ball (both very popular).  The difference in performance is typical with the solid being sanded and early while the pearl is polished and more "skid/snap". 

Market history says a hybrid will be popular also so the manufacturer produces a ball with 5 units of the pearl performance additive to produce a ball with performance that falls between the solid and pearl.

As for appearance, there are pearl additives added to the coverstock that when polished to a high grit give the ball that typical pearl look.  These additives don't have a discernible affect to the performance of the ball. 

You can have multi-color reactive and pearl coverstocks and you can have single color hybrids. 



If the colors truly represented the different coverstocks, drilling them to get the desired performance would be very difficult.  Imagine trying to drill something like the Storm Frantic to get the desired reaction:


Bowldozer

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Re: Bringing a Bowling Ball Back to Life
« Reply #17 on: May 19, 2019, 06:00:54 PM »
Yes, the Frantic pic illustrates the orange seemingly dull surface as opposed to the green pearl color.

I used to think the mother pearl look on it was due to mica glitter.
Obviously, I was wrong.

The look of GB3 was more homogeneous..
Light blue pearl / dark blue dull..

Thanks for the input.
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