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Author Topic: Importance of Diversity  (Read 1560 times)

LeftyHomer10

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Importance of Diversity
« on: May 08, 2006, 02:46:04 AM »
How important is it, when building an arsenal, to have different finishes on your equipment. Currently I have an ACE and a Hybrid, both 1500 grit. When I get in the mode of thinking about getting a new ball, the balls I look at also are 1500 grit polished. I understand that you can easily change the covers, but is that something that needs to be thought about? Should I consider changing up a cover so that one is 1500 and the other is, say, 800? Thank you.
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tjj300

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Re: Importance of Diversity
« Reply #1 on: May 08, 2006, 11:18:09 AM »
The purpose of building an arsenal is to have equipment that handles a range of conditions. You can do that with surfaces, coverstocks, drillings, or cores. Usually in various combinations.  However, do it the way you are most comfortable.  So, basically, it's only important if you believe it's important.


LuckyLefty

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Re: Importance of Diversity
« Reply #2 on: May 08, 2006, 11:23:18 AM »
Very often if you tend to bowl in one center.. a certain cover seems to work very well on all the different balls one buys.   Then you go somewhere else....

REgards,

Luckylefty
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dizzyfugu

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Re: Importance of Diversity
« Reply #3 on: May 09, 2006, 04:18:22 AM »
It really depends on the occassions you play, and your style. Me, I keep a rather huge mountain of balls with different drillings, coverstocks and surface preps - but I play a traveling league and visit about 5 very different houses for training every now and then, where I learned which material works well and which not.

Surface prep is the most important thing to influence ball reaction - so a purposeful prep and good maintenance (cleaning etc.) are important for a good performance.

Polished balls will have a rather sharp breakpoint and tend to be flippy, a sheen or even dull ball will rather arc and react softer, sometimes easier to control. A polished ball will also skid in oil and react when it hits dry ground, while a sanded ball will grip earlier. If you "mix" this with certain coverstock and core characteristics, you can make an educated guess how a ball will (relatively) react.

If a ball does not react to your liking, changing the surface is the best thing to do - and it is quickly done.

IMHO, having at least a small variety of coverstocks and matching preps is vital if you want to become competitive on a wider range of conditions. I'd go with a polished pearl reactive for lighter, fresh conditions, a polished or sheen light load particle ball for medium conditions and tough shots, and a sanded solid ball, either reactive or particle, for long and soupy patterns. The medium ball might even not be necessary at all, it really depends on how much you can adapt your game and how wide condition range of the lanes you want to play is.
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CoachJim

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Re: Importance of Diversity
« Reply #4 on: May 09, 2006, 04:24:00 AM »
You can have a 1500 grit polished cover in the ACE, The HYbrid and a Trifecta and have 3 different reactions because they are 3 different surfaces. I wouldn't worry about having the same grit so much as the same type of surface before I changed the surface so won't match something else.