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Author Topic: Raging Red Fuze  (Read 23160 times)

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Raging Red Fuze
« on: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM »
The Raging Red Fuze features an Aggressive Reactive (AR) coverstock based on Brunswick's classic PowrKoil18 reactive. This new AR Material has been specially to retain the characteristic aggresive reative reaction to the dry outside boards and backends of typical league conditions, while at the same time providing increased mid-lane traction to the heavier oiled sections of the lane.


The Raging Red Fuze also features a totally new Geometrically-Balanced, medium-low RG core, which has been designed to produce heavy mid-lane roll that leads to an aggressive backend reation.  In combination with a split density outer core that provides perimeter top weight control, the total core system of the Raging Red Fuze provides exceptional mid-lane and backend strength.


The state of the art fusion of Aggressive Reactive coverstock and high-tech core work together to create a ball that will provide superior reactions for a wide variety of bowlers on typical league conditions.  Because of its ability totraction in the oil and respond quickly to high friction areas on the lane, the Raging Red Fuze will deliver outstanding performance for most bowlers on medium-dry to medium-oily lane conditions.



Specifications are as follows:


Coverstock: AR (Aggressive Reactive)

Color: Raging Red

Hardness: 77-79

Factory Finish: Polished

Core Dynamics:

   

       
  • RG Max: 2.559

  •    
  • RG Min: 2.504

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  • RG Diff: 0.055

  •    
  • RG Avg: 3.8

  •    

Performance:

   

       
  • Hook Potential: 110

  •    
  • Length: 100

  •    
  • BreakPoint Shape: 75

  •    

Available Weights: 12-16 Pounds



View the official Spec sheet including Drill Instructions

 

john_kleist

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #31 on: November 19, 2002, 10:12:15 PM »
I am a high speed, high rev bowler.  This ball is a house bowlers dream.  One of the most forgiving balls on a house condition that I have ever thrown.  I have my 16lb Red Fuze drilled up 5 1/4 X 5 which puts the pin right above the ring finger and the CG in the center of the grip.  This ball gets down the lane very well and produces an EXTREMELY angular move to the pocket.  I have never seen a ball flare more than my Red Fuze.  Didn't have very much success on tournament conditions because of how much it flares I would say.  As long as there is a decent amount of oil on the lane this is the ball to throw to generate the most amount of area.  Hooks too much on the dry and not quite enough on the flood.  If you are looking for a great house condition ball this is it.

YeahHossNV

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #32 on: November 19, 2002, 10:51:43 PM »
This ball has a pin 1-2. It is drilled low track rev leverage with the cg kicked out 45 degrees with a weighthole off the axis. This ball roll extremely early for a pearl cover and on drier lanes burns way too much energy in the heads. On a condition with a fair amount of oil(not heavy) it gets medium length with a strong backend. The ball hits really hard and carries well. I tried to sand it to 1000 but it made it burn way too much energy. The ball is best when polished. This ball is not for everybody. Crankers will find that this ball burns up way to much energy with thier rev rate. This ball is mainly for strokers and tweeners.

Michael

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #33 on: November 21, 2002, 09:26:14 PM »
Hey guys I quoted in another review of this ball that we would continue to give this ball a try. Well I am continuing up my review of this ball. We redrilled it and put the pin under the ring finger and kicked the cg out about 3 in. from my center of grip. Polished the stew out of it with storm's xtra shine. This ball just didn't roll good for me. On the majority of the house shots here if I get right it hooks out and when I move in to like 21,22,23 it makes the trip to the 1-3 but hits like crap. I saw quite a few of the pros using this layout and thought there might be a message in that, but thought wrong. When I take some the hand out of it and play a little straighter it rolls pretty decent, but nothing special. I would recommend this ball for a stroker, crankers and tweeners look for another ball.
Good Luck and Good Bowling,
Michael

BowlersAidProShop-Randy

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #34 on: November 30, 2002, 12:24:29 AM »
I drilled this ball 4 and 1/2 with the mass bias kicked towards my axis line (similar to a 4 1/2 by 3 or so)....no weight hole needed.

I was very surprised at how early this ball read the lanes for a pearl reactive ball.  Don't get me wrong it is nowhere near as early reading as a Detonator but it still starts grabbing pretty quick.  This ball has really grown on me after a rocky start.  I have never seen a ball that I can open up a pair of lanes better with.  This is not the ball if you need something for lanes that are hooking a bit.  This ball needs a smidge in the heads to really have a whole lot left for the pins.  If you have noticed the first few weeks of the season on the pba shows many of the pros have been throwing this ball on the shows.  I wouldn't call this the most versatile ball on the planet, but it is definitely a goody for those looking for something to open the lane up when there is a little juice up front.
Lane 1 = David Koresh of bowling

TC Solovic

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #35 on: December 03, 2002, 11:37:32 PM »
OK...this ball rules.  Drilled stack with the pin above the ring finger.  I've had it for a month, and it has already gotten me my first 300.  This ball is the ball for anyone who has trouble with leaving ten or seven pins on oily conditions.  At first, I had a problem with unusual leaves if I even just went a little high into the pocket...but after getting a few games on it, the ball plows through anything.  

I have yet to throw it on a genuine sport condition but when I do I will update this.

In essence, this is the best Brunswick ball I've thrown, and is always the ball I throw my first practice shot with.

Ryan Peebles

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #36 on: June 07, 2003, 02:16:11 PM »
I got a second Raging Red Fuze through a summer have-a-ball league (15#, 3" pin, 2.7 oz. top weight).  Drilled this one low-RG strong:  2 1/2" X 3 1/2" with an X-hole 1 3/4" below the axis point on the vertical axis line.  I kept the box finish on this ball as well...  

The first opportunity to use this Fuze was on a 41-foot Sport shot... doing a little post-league jackpot bowling!  I wanted a little stronger reaction in the wet-dry and carrydown than my Fuze Navy Sparkle (see review).  Again, I want to thank Bill Orlikowski at Brunswick for both ball and drilling suggestions for the patterns and conditions I questioned.

I played a tightrope near the third arrow:  yank it and the ball rolled out early, float it and the ball would hang.  Nevertheless, the early roll and strong, smooth arc make this Raging Red Fuze perfect for the wet-dry.  It does have a stronger backend than the Navy Sparkle with superb mix and carry.  I think the slightly stronger drilling on the Raging Red made it possible!

I won two games (and $75) with scores of 224 and 255... with no washouts, splits, or opens of any kind!  It was definitely better than I expected!
Ryan Peebles
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www.CaliforniaBowlingLLC.com

GET YOUR SWAG ON!

Gene J Kanak

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #37 on: June 09, 2003, 02:26:43 PM »
Only had this ball for about 2 weeks before trading it, and I never did get it sized correctly. However, from what I saw in that limited time, this is a fine ball. I'm not a fan of big B, as I find most of their stuff rolls up too early and hits fairly soft. However, this ball breaks that mold completely. It can be used on everything from light oil to heavy oil (provided the backends are clean) and the hit is very strong. This is one of those stand left, throw right skid-flip balls that people love to throw. The recovery is fantastic and it carries the corners very well. I would have kept it had I had room in the bag for it. 8.5 out 10.
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albertsjj

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #38 on: October 29, 2003, 12:00:22 PM »
I love this ball.  Wet or synthetic lanes this is a great ball.  It has a great backend snap which leave the deck swept clear. This is the hardest hit ball I have used. Did have some problems keep in the pocket on dry or wood lanes.

Garcia

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #39 on: December 13, 2003, 10:53:16 PM »
Drilled - Pin over Middle Finger, Cg kicked out,
X-hole on PAP (6x4.5)
Coverstock - Grey scotchbrite, reshined w/NeoTac #2

This ball is discontinued but I know it was a favorite on Tour. I found a blank and drilled it. Since my Inferno reads so hard in the midlane, it sometimes lacks the backend pop I need sometimes. So I drilled this strong pearl with a high pin to delay its reaction and get the kick on the backend. This ball is very strong, even with the weaker drill it has no sign of squirt on longer patterns. Most longer sport patterns are playable inside of 3rd arrow, this ball is right at home. It holds line easily and has a strong but controllable change of direction. A great Brunswick ball, I know Brad Angelo had much of his success on Tour with it.

Too bad its discontinued, but I know the Inferno would be a suitable replacement with a similar drill pattern.

BigJ300

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #40 on: March 07, 2004, 06:06:51 AM »
One of my favorite balls. Works great on medium and medium-dry lanes. Thought it was more aggressive but in fact it is not. Goes very long and comes back with a nice powerful hook!
I averaged 221 over the whole league using only the Fuze AR and a Brunswick Spaceball (I did not need the Spaceball very often but anyways....).
Very versatile ball. Great Job Brunswick!
10 out of 10


Big J

dizzyfugu

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #41 on: December 20, 2004, 02:33:25 AM »
Hum, seems that it has been some time that somebody took notice of this great ball? Well, once more a lucky shot for me at Ebay . I always had an eye on one of these, and I finally ended up with a used 15 lbs. pin-out Raging Red Fuze from a lefty in very good condition for EUR 50,- (about $ 60,- at the moment), plus plugging, drilling and inserts.

Some Raging Red Fuze balls are (end of 2004) still on sale in Germany, but they are in closeout these days. New balls are available for less than EUR 150,-, and the ball is (update July 2006) still a common sight in league bowling and a favorite ball with serious players.

About me:
Style = Stroker/mild Tweener, right-handed
Speed = 13,5-14,5 mph
PAP = 5" & 7/8"^
Axis tilt = 18,7°
Revs = 250-300 RPM at release
For more details, check out my profile, please.


Ball setup:

To make it a complement to my Trauma (pin-in, drilled for wide arc), my 3 3/4" pin-out Fuze got Brunswick's layout 2L for high-differential balls for a later reaction, just by the book:
Pin from PAP ~4 1/2", pin ended up 1" directly above of ring finger hole. CG placed at 90° from PAP, ending up 3/4" to the right of midlane on the midline. No X-hole necessaery, a urthane thumb slug and silicone finger inserts completed the ball.

=====*===
===o=o===
=========
=====#===
=========
====O====

* = Pin
# = CG


Ball picture: http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3527890

This drilling matches well with the ball's main characteristics and the juiced-up PK 18 pearl coverstock called "Aggressive Reactive": strong midlane recovery, smooth breakpoint, lots of traction on dry boards (especially on a THS) and even in the oil. The core provides a rather early roll tendency, but it is very powerful. All in all, this results in a terrific back end performance on medium-dry to medium-oily conditions.


The testing program

First tests on 30' and 40' left me immediately with very satisfying results between 180-200 pins (I am averaging ~165 at the moment). Due to the strong, rather arcing motion and the almost violent roll of the low-RG core, this ball forced me to move quite deep:

On a 30' pattern with dry backends I had to stand at 25 with the right shoe tip (add 2 boards for left shoe inside), aiming at 12/13th board area, and it moved screaming across the lane into the pocket with thunderous roll and very good carry. And I am just a stroker! Even with my Trauma I rarely have to stand farther than 23rd board on the same conditions, although the Trauma moves differently, with longer skid phase and a sharper backend move. Amazing!

On an oily 40’ sport pattern with no dry outside boards I had to play it fast and straight (Normal hook release was inconsistent), with an end over end release. This worked very well, and pin carry stayed the same as if playing on the easier 30’. Stood at 22, aiming at 3rd arrow, raising speed through a higher starting position. Although I tried to kill the hook, this was not possible. After reaching its breakpoint at about 35’, the ball made a recognizable arcing move to the left (covering 5 boards, I guess), with a good angle into the pocket directly to the 5-pin. And with consistency!


Conclusions

The Raging Red Fuze is a great all-round ball on medium oil. With its tendency to roll due its low RG and great midlane performance, it is ideal for strokers on longer medium oil or short heavy oil patterns with some dry boards at the end: good for big Hollywood hooks and consistently high results. I think it would be difficult to make this a real skid/snap ball. You will need speed and revs to move sharply.

High-rev players will also be able to play the Raging Red Fuze with more oil, since the pearl cover goes cleanly through the heads and saves energy for the back end where it grips like hell and creates a strong move, delivering the core's energy to the pocket. IMHO, crankers should seriously consider a moderate drilling layout, since the Raging Red Fuze might prove uncontrollably strong on dry or broken-down lane conditions.

Lane utility for tested ball (pattern length vs. oil volume):

|S M L
|h e o
|o d n
|r . g
|t
_______
|0 + X| Light volume
|0 X X| Medium volume
|X X 0| Heavy volume

Legend:
X = Best suited with effective control & carry
+ = Fairly suited (works, somehow, but lacks control)
0 = Unsuited (ineffective, either slips or burns up)


The chart concept is borrowed from Storm's 2003 catalogue. Surface prep and drillings may change the results, it is just personal experience with my style

Although Brunswick recognizes this ball in their Ball Comparison Chart to be the same as the Monster Bruiser (M13 position), I consider the Raging Red Fuze from league bowler observations with the Bruiser to be the overall stronger ball. The Aggressive Reactive shell is impressive, even after some years, and the high flare/RG differential adds to the ball's versatility. I think it is quite close to the Original Inferno on comparable conditions, just a touch rollier and generally reacting a bit earlier and smoother. When you play these balls side by side, you will notice the slightly more aggressive reaction shape of the OI.

Pin carry could be better, this is the only critics I can apply so far. Make a flush hit, and it seems as if the pins were imploding with a cracking noise. You will hear "good" pocket hits for sure...
Light hits tend to be left open, and lack of oil can cause burnout and splits.

In direct comparison, my Trauma shows, with its ACCU-Tread pearl coverstock and a similar core, more impact action on a wider range of hits and half-hits. I can confirm this through my friend/bowling pal who has the same pair of balls in his assortment - they show pretty much the same performance characteristics (although they move differently due to style and drilling).
But please do not misunderstand me: the Raging Red Fuze IS a hard hitter! There are simply better benchmarks, even among older balls.

Nevertheless, I give it an overall 8,5 out of 10. I had great expectations, and my Raging Red Fuze fulfilled them from the start, even though newer balls and coverstocks evened this out in the course of the 2 years I own this ball now.

The Raging Red Fuze really IS a strong ball - maybe underestimated by today’s standards, but not out-dated. Even the core lives on in overseas balls like the Dynamic Zone II (with a particle pearl coverstcok), the Majestic Zone II (with a solid PK 22 shell) or the Mega Zone H [re-edited in July 2006>.

If you find one in good shape or even NIB at reasonable price, it is worth having in the arsenal as a main ball for medium conditions. It is also a good Inferno alternative, when you can live with that lightly softer hook shape. It even looks good! Classy style among some modern balls which tend to be a bit intrusive to the eye .

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DizzyFugu --- Reporting from Germany

"All that we see or seem, is but a dream within a dream..." - Edgar Allen Poe
 
Edited on 26.09.2011 at 7:41 AM
DizzyFugu ~ Reporting from Germany

Oskuposer

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #42 on: June 22, 2005, 02:21:29 PM »
Wow got this ball in a trade with a friend and this ball is really smooth, off the dry.  The layout is this


----o-o
-----*

-----&
-----O

no weight whole the ball goes long and then the break that is makes is a tame arc to the pocket it has a really heavy roll. I used it on a sport shot in league monday night and this ball was the only ball that wouldnt go coast to coast. The shot was a 44 foot patter just like the TOC this year a long pattern with a very little amount of oil and this ball was perfect on it once it hit the dry it just walked right to the pocket.  The only problem that i had with it is that like all Big B balls they hit to hard.  And when it is very dry because then it just rolls out but other than that a good ball.
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LeoAnalyn

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #43 on: August 23, 2006, 12:44:30 PM »
This is a very hard hitting ball. I've used it on a 6pm league with a fresh +Medium oil. It has a nice Arc then roll very hard toward the target. I called it Kabooooom!

Updated 11/20/06 Bowled 300 on Medium Light lane.  

leftyinhawaii

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Re: Raging Red Fuze
« Reply #44 on: February 11, 2007, 01:00:15 PM »
Pretty happy overall with this ball.  Reacts well in medium to medium/heavy oil.  Can even be used after things dry up a good bit without burning out by just picking up the speed a little.  Handles the mid-lane well, and snaps into the pocket with authority once it hits the dry.  As the lanes I bowl on almost always start flooded I rarely use this ball in the first or even second game.  As it reacts well in third game, I must assume that carry down is not a problem.  The RRF is fairly forgiving when missing inside which is rare trait for any ball, but it also recovers okay when I miss outside...it may not strike but it usually makes it back to the head pin.  The RRF stays remarkably oil free and needs very little maintenance other than just regular cleaning.  I resurfaced it once when the track became very noticeable and the ball handled it well.  It was a touch flat at first but started hooking again after about 10 - 15 throws.  I would highly recommend this ball.
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