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Author Topic: Around the corner tournament winners?  (Read 6156 times)

LuckyLefty

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Around the corner tournament winners?
« on: November 28, 2012, 07:19:46 AM »
I've been asked to post in another thread all my own.

Here it is.

This is simple, you are preparing to play in a big tournament, you know the shot is going to morph to inside, you are going to end up deeper than the fourth arrow and you like symmetrics.

You've picked your favorite pin position for this shot(probably over 5 inches pin to PAP).  Now tell me about the ball that you are planning to put the cg farther from your pap than your pin?  The ball you are planning to "win" with?

Or, if you have recently won a large dollar tournament lately or regional, playing deeper than the 4th arrow let's hear about the ball drilled like this with your cg negative or farther from your pap then your pin? 

I look forward to the large list! 

Cg No Maddeh?

Regards,

Luckylefty
PS remember Brunswick's study was intended to prove why it wouldn't matter where your CG was placed in creating ball reaction, to avoid the usbc passing a rule that cg's should not be farther from the grip center than 1 inch, and also to possibly prevent weight holes if I remember right....
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

 

kotm

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #1 on: November 28, 2012, 06:54:30 PM »
regarding your PS LL...

brunswicks CG study was a done a decade before the usbc/ibpsia/manufactures battle over potential rule changes.

-kotm

ps, when i get in that deep, it is usually a slingshot drilled 60 by 4 by 30 with a double thumb balance hole.  if i need more pop i would do the same in a trop heat hybrid....

the last long pin "barbell layout" ball i did was a tidal wave wipeout (135 by 5 1/2 by 40) with a pitched hole 1" over the fingers polished to the nines with control-it and it made countless mortgage payments for me bumping a wall so high you couldn't see over the middles with cherry picker on a old wood surface.  it was a good 10 pin ball if i went deeper than 15 with it.
Good Luck & Good Bowling!

Ron Machniak
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Rightycomplex

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #2 on: November 28, 2012, 08:26:55 PM »
The drilling of the ball will not make the difference in this case moreso than ball choice. The reaction you describing is predicated on what the lane is giving you, not what ball you lay out for it. First off, you wouldn't choose a symm to do this task unless you were going with something that backended... HARD!!! or the condition was dry enough to get the ball to turn the corner from that spot. Most would choose an asymm because the ball is going to give you a more defined breakpoint and sharper overall motion. For example, my ball to do this is a Roto-Grip Critical Theory. Its laid out 70x4.5x40 and backends beyond all belief. Sadly being lefthanded, I've thrown the ball a whopping 3 total games over 2 months of having it and havent had that look. Most times, there just isnt enough oil up front and dry in the back to get the ball to finish from that deep. For those in which the condition does allow that option, they are trying to control that spot, not get the ball to hall tail from it.

CG's swung out will result in a weight hole. At that point, you are taking side weight or adding or subtracting from the flare potential of the ball, that is all. It doesnt mean that by adding a flare increasing hole, you will cover more boards or get the ball to flip from deep.
Prime example, I have 2 Storm Crossroads, Crossroad #1 (2.75 pin to CG) (65x4.5x40 small P1 hole)(2000 grit) and #2 (4.75 pin to cg)(40x3.375x40 big hole 2" down on the VAL)(2000 grit). #1 covers 4 more board than number #2 at the beginning of the night and has 7 boards of separation by the end. Both balls can recover from deeper in but #1 is gives me the most margin for error with the p1 hole. This is simply because the shot allows it in this particular house. Now the house that i drill in is way more oil that the house I bowl league in, so #2 would be the better option because the breakpoint is not as defined. Long story short, it all depends on the shot.
James C. Jones
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LuckyLefty

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #3 on: November 28, 2012, 08:54:47 PM »
Kotm,

I appreciate your comments.

Yes you are right Brunswick has been teaching these concepts as they say in the first part of this video since 1991.

However this video  appears to made in about 2005 to persuade the USBC why the cg 1 inch rule was overkill.  Part of the proposed rule was also to eliminate balance holes.

On the 135 degree ball, you are right again!  A ball like this has very little chance of carrying from a very deep angle.  Using it from inside would put a bowler at a considerable disadvantage wouldn't it?

REgards,

Luckylefty
I assume that there will be many posts like the one by my good friend Rightycomplex but alas I still don't think we will hear of many bowlers winning tournaments from inside while using balls that finish 1 to 2 inches lower in the pocket(previous links out here on this subject) or with less entry angle, unless they just love corner pin spares, but I await!
« Last Edit: November 28, 2012, 09:06:29 PM by LuckyLefty »
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

David Lee Yskes

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #4 on: November 29, 2012, 12:52:54 AM »
I'd probably have something like the 811c/t or 706A drilled up...

And I'd just do a simple pin up over the fingers and have the CG in a strong position..

that way the ball still gets down the lane, but has some kick on the backend...

" Lift your skirt, grab your balls and learn how to bowl "

scotts33

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #5 on: November 29, 2012, 02:17:15 AM »
LL--You keep not thinking about x hole on the gradient line which Ron/kotm alluded to.  It's not about the CG placement it's about putting the CG in a place to allow the correct x hole on the gradient line to allow you to kick out the back row.

Let's face it ball surface and ball manipulation with hand/release with ball speed and correct layout are what is going to carry.

LL---Why keep harping on CG placement?  It's NOT CG placement it's x hole on the gradient line.  You keep missing this and blew up the other thread.  Why don't you get it?  Wondering???

BTW if you are a wrongsider and have more backend normally I get why you keep working over CG placement.  You keep talking in your threads about over reaction this I understand also as being a wrongsider.  Always looking for weak balls and they are the greatest thing...where I am a righty go the other way...amp up my ball speed as best I can cut down on axis rotation and use stronger stuff to kick out back row....possibly with weaker layouts.  We are direct opposites but I am unlike high speed no handers I am not in that realm.  Fix your axis rotation issue and this will fix a lot of issues.  Lefties with a lot of axis rotation and tilt are always looking for ways to lessen backend ball reaction hence your issue with this whole thing.  Again JMO!


Quote
I've been asked to post in another thread all my own.

Here it is.

This is simple, you are preparing to play in a big tournament, you know the shot is going to morph to inside, you are going to end up deeper than the fourth arrow and you like symmetrics.

You've picked your favorite pin position for this shot(probably over 5 inches pin to PAP).  Now tell me about the ball that you are planning to put the cg farther from your pap than your pin?  The ball you are planning to "win" with?

Or, if you have recently won a large dollar tournament lately or regional, playing deeper than the 4th arrow let's hear about the ball drilled like this with your cg negative or farther from your pap then your pin?

I look forward to the large list!

Cg No Maddeh?

Regards,

Luckylefty
PS remember Brunswick's study was intended to prove why it wouldn't matter where your CG was placed in creating ball reaction, to avoid the usbc passing a rule that cg's should not be farther from the grip center than 1 inch, and also to possibly prevent weight holes if I remember right.
Scott

makpa

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #6 on: November 29, 2012, 03:57:00 AM »
Depending on the Volume.
i will throw 1 of the following
Violent Eruption @ 45 x 5 7/8 x 40
Eruption @ 45 x 6 x 35
Freeze Hybrid @ 45 x 5 3/8 x 40

It depends on how much friction is needed.

LuckyLefty

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #7 on: November 29, 2012, 07:42:49 AM »
Scott,

This is nothing about me, I have posts on that.  I note the last poster all with strong cg or MB positions.

If it don't matter, why not put it anywhere?  CG that is?

I also note the Weighthole position for the gentleman above KOTM was not on the gradient line.

Regards,

Luckylefty
PS Scott, I really appreciate you trying to help me with MY bowling, that is not what this post about.  I actually will discuss with you some ideas on that subject and I know you are a sincere good guy regarding that, THANKS I mean it.   PPS, I cAN bowl around the corner, no cg's ever on the negative side for that, it's EASY with my roll!
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

spmcgivern

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #8 on: November 29, 2012, 11:12:15 AM »
For me, I will pretty much put the CG in a position where an extra hole can be added if needed, yet at the same time be USBC compliant without one.  Seems to me the above bowler with "strong" CG positions has a universal 45° drill angle for all symmetrics.  This would make sense to me since with this CG position, his ball may be USBC compliant without a weight hole, and yet still gives him the opportunity to add a weight hole if desired.

The key to having the CG on the positive side is to allow a weight hole if the bowler wants one.  If after throwing the ball he is pleased with the performance, then he doesn't have to drill a hole if he doesn't want to and the ball is still USBC legal.

I have even seen people put the CG even farther in the positive direction to a position that would make the ball USBC non-compliant.  They would then put a weight hole in a location on the gradient line that would not change the reaction, but remove enough weight to bring the ball back into USBC specs if they liked the reaction as is.

I think using a particular bowlers performance and the way his symmetrical ball was drilled in relation to the CG location, is incorrect.  So Mika's CG was on his grip centerline.  Did Mika say he chose this location to provide some kind of performance?  If the next telecast shows a bowler using a "strong" position CG (according to your assumptions) and plays straight up 15 and wins, are you going to change your line of reasoning? 

LuckyLefty

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #9 on: December 01, 2012, 09:34:43 AM »
SPM,

I am much the same way in placing CG unless there are special circumstances.

More on that in another post!  But let me summarize and say if early friction is found and not much "Belly" midlane wanted.

I am a big enjoyer of midlane, if I have it I often bowl well.  The question is where does it come from, the drilling or supplied by earlier friction in the lane, then the drilling should ideally counter it!

Regarding a bowler with a strong CG out.  One of my all time favorite balls if some good oil coverage is a 3 3/8 Pin to PAP Crimson Red Sledgehammer drilled control(ie about a 40 degree angle drilling) with Mass Bias on the VAL and cg out a bit.  Thank you MO!

A moderate size but deepish weighthole on the PAP results in beautiful small belly around the 11 to 8 area on most league conditions and then a beautiful roll and slurve into the pocket that creates ton of light mixer strikes on big backends and very few splits.  Did I say Thank you MO?  Ending statics are very neutral near 0 with maybe a touch of bottom weight! 

This reaction is also nice on a bouncy World team challenge shot.
Playing inside out over 15.

I will be very surprised to see a player to use a drilling as I have just described(and as I believe you also described above) not end up with a nice rounded midlane with this drilling.  As is the usual with the cg or mass bias kicked positive.

Regards,

Luckylefty
PS still looking for our first poster with a large drilling angle and cg negative to win from around the corner deeper than the fourth arrow.   
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

kidlost2000

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #10 on: December 01, 2012, 04:34:42 PM »
If your playing as deep as the 4th arrow you not worried about the CG your worried about the coverstock and the ball being able to recover. Your wanting the ball to hopefully still skid through the heads and have enough length when it gets to friction down lane not to go through the face. A half board is not seen by the bowler. You can not adjust from a half board reaction in the last 4-6" feet down lane if you can't visibly see it.

The coverstock, VAL angle, and pin distance along with cover finish will all play larger rolls in getting your ball where it needs to be. On asymmetric bowling balls you ignore the CG and pay attention to the Pin and MB for the layout then worry about the statics afterwards. The only reason most worry about the cg on symmetric bowling balls is because of the factor of increasing the bowling balls dynamics by adding a weight hole.

It can easily make the cores int diff(mb) increase making the ball every bit as asymmetric as a HP bowling ball. Increasing the int diff makes the ball react faster. This may not be what you want when playing deep and dealing with friction.


I currently have a green/white Misfit I laid out and left for my brother to drill. The cg was kicked out about 3/4". Not enough to go over on side weight but enough to add a very nice weight hole if I decided I wanted it.

Well he re did the line and put the cg on the center grip line. I wasn't thrilled but knew from a previous Misfit the strength of the ball and why it likely wouldn't need the weight hole. The ball clears the heads and is extremely angular down lanes. It can easily be played from deep inside when the lanes transition with out incident. the strength of the core and the coverstock allow this ball to hook as much as is does, not the cg being on the center grip line.
…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

LuckyLefty

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #11 on: December 02, 2012, 12:28:28 PM »
Kidlost,

FIrst of all I get this focus on weightholes.  Regardless of whether one believes in how weightholes add flare(ie brunswick), increase differential(Mo Pinel), move the PSA(mo Pinel) or increase or decrease statics(Lane 1, and the Gravity balance system), I think all bowlers would agree that weightholes can increase, decrease, or leave similar to the ball without a weighthole.

Therefore in many cases it makes sense to set up a ball with statics close to the maximum of positive of side weight so one can Tweak reaction with weightholes after seeing the reaction. 

However, I believe there are special cases where I believe it makes sense to have core orientations what I call negative or where the cg or hypothetical projected PSA are on the negative side of the ball.  I have several of these balls and find they continually work for that special situation or should I say a couple of them.  (I will post more on that in a separate post in a couple days).

However while on this post I'd like to state there are drilling angle orientations for both symmetrics and assymetrics that I believe maximize all the midlane and backend a ball has to offer.  That range is usually somewhere in about 45 degrees to 65 degrees.  I have a difficult time seeing orientations or 0 to 30 that no matter what the weighthole orientation may NOT (correction 12/4/2012) have a difficult time generating tons of midlane(they will have that) but also backend.  On these drillings I think, why fight city hall they are designed for midlane and controlled backends.

Please update if you know of a 0 to 30 degree drilling angle ball that ended up being a high in the pocket ball greater than the 45 to 60 degree drilled versions.
(I usually find them to be the midlane ball that holds in the pocket and often lighter on the headpin)  Few splits and lots of light mixers....Fun for tournaments ....

The tighter drilling angles referenced above that  result in control on the backend can seriously win tournaments where your better opponents are all using  maximizing drilling angles that emphasize both midlanes and backends.  (thanks again MO!)

Also, there is place for drillings that minimize midlane and still provide aggressive backends.  Or those that mimimize midlane and provide controlled backends.

Kid, you know I have a lot of respect for you.  I'm curious about your Brother's pin position on his grip center CG ball.  Please update on this post with his first 4th arrow and deeper tournament victory.  If his pin is over his middle finger or bridge, I believe it is possible or if Extreme friction develops in the heads and midlane I believe it is possible also.

We are still waiting for our first post in the affirmative to this post.

REgards,

Luckylefty
« Last Edit: December 04, 2012, 07:18:50 AM by LuckyLefty »
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

DP3

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #12 on: December 02, 2012, 02:10:18 PM »
Why so much focus on the c.g. indicator? The ending c.g. after the ball is drilled can move from the initial spot dramatically depending on the size of the holes drilled, depth, weight of inserts/slug.  Most drillers won't even check the ending c.g. after the ball has been drilled because there are about 7 other factors that dominate reaction and entry angle.  Entry angle is the most dominating factor in pin carry.  Track flare migration and friction make up the main components of entry angle. 

What's the real argument here?  There was a period when I was drilling about 5-6 years ago where certain manufacturers had c.g. markings that were off by 1" in any direction imaginable on almost every ball.  Unless you have all of the tools at home yourself to check where the final c.g. is, how can you even determine its effect after so many other important factors?

 I think it's too easy for people to generalize a reaction shape on the lanes without even first taking into consideration the lane/ball surface, lane condition, lane transition and its effect on reaction shape, then blame shift what they are seeing to a marking that's easily identified (cg placement). 

I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with any proven research or opinions, in my professional opinion I'm just saying tournament winners are winners because they manage lane and ball transitions well, keep their angles consistent, make spares, and release the ball with consistency in pressure situations.  I can't imagine at any real competitive level that someone can fully pinpoint the "cg mark" as the sole factor in why a ball is/is not reacting the way they feel it should.

kidlost2000

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #13 on: December 02, 2012, 04:16:33 PM »
"However, I believe there are special cases where I believe it makes sense to have core orientations what I call negative or where the cg or hypothetical projected PSA are on the negative side of the ball.  I have several of these balls and find they continually work for that special situation or should I say a couple of them.  (I will post more on that in a separate post in a couple days)."


How is the core negative? You can have negative side weight but what makes a pin negative or a psa negative? If you look at Micheal Fagan and how he throws the ball a 4-5" pin puts the pin well left of his middle finger, same for the psa. Is that negative even though we know it is only 4-5" (which is very standard for most) because it is left of his center grip line makes it negative? The ball doesn't know it any different when Fagan is throwing it because of his release and rotation on the ball.

" That range is usually somewhere in about 45 degrees to 65 degrees.  I have a difficult time seeing orientations or 0 to 30 that no matter what the weighthole orientation may have a difficult time generating tons of midlane(they will have that) but also backend.  On these drillings I think, why fight city hall they are designed for midlane and controlled backends."


The drilling angle places the MB somewhere between the thumb and the bowlers VAL. The larger the angle 45-65 the closer the psa and the cg should be to the bowlers center grip line. In reference to what you believe about the cg that would put it in a weak position and not allow for deep angles. A drill angle of 10-30 puts the psa and the cg way out by the bowlers VAL which will put the ball into a roll a lot sooner and generate more midlane and a sooner roll. With less backend reaction. This is what you want for heavier oil patterns where the oil is going to give the ball length to begin with. This is all been stated and shown in the information given talking about the Dual Angle layout method and desired reactions.

"Please update if you know of a 0 to 30 degree drilling angle ball that ended up being a high in the pocket ball greater than the 45 to 60 degree drilled versions."

Take any ball with a 10-30 drilling angle and the same ball with the 45-60 degree angle and bowl on a heavier oil pattern and then you can tell us.

http://wiki.bowlingchat.net/wiki/images/c/cd/DualAngle.pdf


"I'm curious about your Brother's pin position on his grip center CG ball.  Please update on this post with his first 4th arrow and deeper tournament victory.  If his pin is over his middle finger or bridge, I believe it is possible or if Extreme friction develops in the heads and midlane I believe it is possible also."


I don't think you understood what I wrote. The ball is mine, I left it for him to drill. The likely hood of me winning any tournament with any ball is slim and none. The ball is 30 x 5 x 75. That is pin above the ring and cg in the palm. The ball is ideal for clearing the heads and being angular down lane. I guess I will post a video the next time I practice to help show what I am referring to. I'm not sure why you think a pin up ball with the cg in the palm can't play deep inside angles. If you take a poll most bowlers would probably tell you that works rather well.
« Last Edit: December 02, 2012, 08:53:07 PM by kidlost2000 »
…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

LuckyLefty

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Re: Around the corner tournament winners?
« Reply #14 on: December 02, 2012, 11:03:13 PM »
Kid,

I am confused as to notation.  If I understand the drilling notation right, it is drill angle, pin to PAP distance and then VAL to pin angle.

A pin above ring and cg on grip center for most paps of 5 X 0 or near that are often notated as 75 X 5 X 30?  Is that what you meant?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iR3eKsm8LKY  Drilling 4.

Regards,

Luckierlefty

It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana