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Author Topic: best way to layout mass bias?  (Read 13348 times)

kleptic

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best way to layout mass bias?
« on: September 26, 2007, 07:48:57 AM »
I'm wondering what the best way to layout mass bias is, and specifically what the most important measurement for mass bias reaction is. is it distance to pap or track? the same as pin layout is?

I see a lot of people say put it on the val or near the val or between the val and track. Isn't saying put something near val kind of like saying put something near ring finger since they are both based on grip and not an actual axis the ball is rotating on?

wouldn't the only measurement really accurate on the val be a specific distance from the axis and not just any place on the val itself?

also I'm wondering about degree layouts people use to say where to put the MB, if you can draw your degree line between the MB-pin and pin-PAP, then you can rotate that to put the pin where you want and that in turn swings the mass bias around, doesnt that make a degree layout different for each person depending on that bowler and how they rotated the degree around?

or maybe neither of those ways to layout the massbias are perfect/best? are there other ways?

I've never really fully understood the effects of mass bias and how to tell what those effects are exactly so I'm hoping somebody can explain it in some detail.

thanks

 

JohnP

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #16 on: September 29, 2007, 08:46:40 PM »

OK, one more try from a different perspective.

Bowler's PAP location is 5 1/2" straight across the midline (very typical, chosen because it takes the up and down variable out).  MB is 6 3/4" from the pin (true on all but the most sophisticated asymmetrical cores and very close even on those).  Layout chosen is 4" PAP to pin and 4" PAP to MB.  These distances are CONSTANTS.  If they are changed, the layout changes.

The distance to the track is something more than 5 1/2", probably about 7".  

Now, explain to me how the MB, which is constant at 4" from the PAP can get into the track, which is 7" away from the PAP. --  JohnP

kleptic

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #17 on: September 29, 2007, 11:09:36 PM »
okay with your scenario it does work out so that the MB is not on the track but what does it prove. what does the MB being 4 inches from the PAP mean? anything?

75 degrees is known as the strong mass bias position

draw your MB-pin line
mark a line 75 degrees from it
mark your pap down that new line 4 inches
draw a arc around the pin 3 inches for a 3 inch pin-val buffer
connect the outside of that arc with your pap to form your val
now go down from the pap 3/4 and over 5 1/4 to find my grip center, using my spans in my profile draw the grip.

using 75 degree and a 4 inch pin puts the MB on my storm triple xtreme I was throwing this layout on for testing for this post at about 6 1/4 inches from the pap.

now in relation to my pap draw my track .5 from thumbhole, you will see that that the MB is nearly on my track. maybe half an inch away.

cleary not a position of strongest instability. I think this shows that degree layouts do not work for everybody for laying out MB.

so I'm wondering how to properly lay out MB to predict with certainty the reaction you are going to get from its position, not just a guestimate.

half way between the val and the track seems like the measurement that makes the most sense to me.

if by your 4x4 example you agree that we shouldnt use degree layouts for mass position then we need to know what different distances from the pap means. there are the charts from morich, one based on a mass bias of 6 3/4 and one for another one of their cores that I think has a 7 inch mass bias, and from those charts the skid/flip mass bias to pap distance changes based on pin-pap distance. so for example using 4 inches pap-mb distance with a 3 inch pin-pap is going to have a different MB effect than the same 4 inch pap-mb distance with a 5 inch pin.

the chart showing this is viewable at the bottom of
https://www.buddiesproshop.com/36/Asymetrical_Layout_Guide.htm

the variable effects of static distance for pap to mb make me think that the pap to mb distance is also not the best way to layout mb.

so far i've read nothing to the contrary of halfway between val and track being the strongest mass bias position. so it seems like all these other layout methods just try to mimic or get close to that position without just flat out saying put the MB between the track and the val.

that was long, let me know what you think.





JohnP

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #18 on: September 30, 2007, 02:53:22 PM »
quote:
half way between the val and the track seems like the measurement that makes the most sense to me.

if by your 4x4 example you agree that we shouldnt use degree layouts for mass position then we need to know what different distances from the pap means. there are the charts from morich, one based on a mass bias of 6 3/4 and one for another one of their cores that I think has a 7 inch mass bias, and from those charts the skid/flip mass bias to pap distance changes based on pin-pap distance. so for example using 4 inches pap-mb distance with a 3 inch pin-pap is going to have a different MB effect than the same 4 inch pap-mb distance with a 5 inch pin.


Then rotate the MB-pin-PAP angle around the PAP so the MB is halfway between the track and the VAL if that's what you think makes sense.  That will change the pin buffer, perhaps to around 4 1/2" and lower the pin to in or under the fingers while maintaining the 75 degree angle.  Remember, the MB position is a small influence on the ball reaction.  Pin to PAP distance is THE MAJOR INFLUENCE.  If you're not a near-pro quality bowler you probably won't be able to tell any difference between 60 deg, 75 deg, 90 deg.  Either system works, just two ways to do the same thing.  If I had selected 4" x 6" we'd have had about the same layout as your example.

The 4 x 4 examples shows that the MB only goes where you allow it to by the parameters you set on the layout.  --  JohnP

Mike Austin

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #19 on: September 30, 2007, 03:33:31 PM »
Kleptic,

Maybe this will help:

http://www.mikeaustinbowling.net/specialagentlayout.html

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kleptic

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #20 on: September 30, 2007, 04:05:27 PM »
thats a good page for showing how to do a degree layout mike, I already know that though. what I don't know/understand is if a degree is layout is uniform for MB reaction for people with all track sizes/locations.

kleptic

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #21 on: September 30, 2007, 04:14:35 PM »
quote:

  If you're not a near-pro quality bowler you probably won't be able to tell any difference between 60 deg, 75 deg, 90 deg.  Either system works, just two ways to do the same thing.  If I had selected 4" x 6" we'd have had about the same layout as your example.

The 4 x 4 examples shows that the MB only goes where you allow it to by the parameters you set on the layout.  --  JohnP


why buy premium balls and not know/care how you are laying them out. doesnt make much sense to me to do that. and yeah the MB goes where you put it, the question is where to put it and why.

I guess I'll figure it out!

assuming that half way between track and val is a good place for the MB, what happens when the MB gets too low and say its .5 from the val and .5 from the track because you are down in the corner of the angle that they create when they meet.

I still have a lot of questions about MB, seems a lot more complex than pin placement!

thanks for the help though guys. I keep redoing layouts on my balls, hopefully eventually I decide on something and go get them drilled, heh


Mike Austin

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #22 on: September 30, 2007, 05:19:40 PM »
quote:
thats a good page for showing how to do a degree layout mike, I already know that though. what I don't know/understand is if a degree is layout is uniform for MB reaction for people with all track sizes/locations.


It is uniform because it is based on YOUR PAP.  The same layout can look different for different people.  Your track coincides with your PAP.

The degrees is not so important for a high track player as is the pin position.  If you get the pin position too low in the grip, the track can be drawn up on the finger holes.  If you feel that this is an issue for you, use pins over the fingers or next to them, not to many under.

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strikingresults-atl

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #23 on: September 30, 2007, 07:49:31 PM »
Guys,
checkout Mo's new system.Its very accurate system and very tweakable.He explains the differece between a small buffer and a large buffer and the reaction  you will receive.Call morich or go to one of the seminars he was a cd to explain it.
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kleptic

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #24 on: October 01, 2007, 12:39:18 AM »
is there anywhere to read about it? I love to bowl but I don't see myself traveling to a bowling ball layout seminar anytime soon.

kleptic

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #25 on: October 01, 2007, 12:42:35 AM »
http://www.morichbowling.com/MosCorner/MosCornerMain.htm

none of the seminars are even remotely close to Fort Lauderdale


JohnP

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #26 on: October 01, 2007, 02:37:19 PM »
quote:
assuming that half way between track and val is a good place for the MB, what happens when the MB gets too low and say its .5 from the val and .5 from the track because you are down in the corner of the angle that they create when they meet.


Look at where the pin would be.  It is probably near the grip center, which makes it close to a Rico1 layout.  That layout reads early with a smooth continuous arc to the pocket.  Very controllable.  With your PAP location, it  will probably need a balance hole in the positive thumb quadrant to move the track away from the finger holes.  After the angle (or distances) is set, pin height tells you more about reaction than MB location does, but of course they move together.  --  JohnP

RealBowler

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #27 on: October 05, 2007, 09:54:57 AM »
Sorry if this is a stupid question -

If you pick a layout, say 4x5, can you still manipulate the MB position?

Basically, don't you need another measurement, like pin so many inches above midline, or CG within a certain distance of grip or something?  

If you measure 4 from the pin, 5 from the MB, where they intersect is the PAP.  But from there, you can draw your up/down measurement in any direction, or you can draw your midline in any direction, right?  Maybe not direction, maybe I should say any angle off of that PAP.

It seems like that is altering the angle (I guess using the degree system??).

Sorry, I don't really get into all the drilling stuff - using the inch system seems the easiest, but I've never actually done it, only what I've seen on this site.
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dizzyfugu

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #28 on: October 05, 2007, 10:09:27 AM »
Maybe I can chime in for some ideas on how to think of the MB?
Well, a strong MB core is basically set up like a normal core with a low MB. With the pin placement, relative to your PAP, you determine how much the ball will flare, and with the pin difference from grip center you determine how long it will go before it makes its move. That's nothing new.

The mass bias and its position (relative to PAP or any other coordinate, even though the PAP is the most important and basic point of orientation) will tell you then what the reaction shape will be. This is different from overall hook potential. Stack it, and the ball will be snappy, put it closer to the PAP and the move will be more arcing.

Take a look at Brunswick's drilling sheets, they give a good idea on basic layouts:

http://www.brunswickbowling.com/uploads/cD/9c/cD9cYxo_H5qv6qNoJDawxQ/Zone_Classic.pdf

You just need to watch out wehn you place the MB in the track area (135° layout, or a label drilling) for a high tracker - this might lead to negative flare.

Since the MB overrides the CG effects, its location is of minor importance for the reaction, even though it is important for static weights and getting the ball legal.
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KDawg77

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Re: best way to layout mass bias?
« Reply #29 on: October 05, 2007, 10:12:07 AM »
Little off the top, long in back,
slope to the left like Gumby.
Munster front, Wyclef right.
Hook that up for me.

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