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Author Topic: PBA Platinum..  (Read 2154 times)

SKC

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PBA Platinum..
« on: May 14, 2009, 01:45:43 AM »

Hi all..

Here's the scenario.. A friend of mine has a PBA Platinum that seems to have lost its pop.. It had pretty much become his benchmark until it pretty much stopped moving in the back..
He's thrown it for maybe 50-60 games, is very thorough in cleaning his balls after use and knows to throw it on the right conditions, so it isnt burning up.. He's even had it in a Rejuvinator Oven, and to his surprise it didn't sweat a single drop..

Anyone have some info or experience with this..

Thanks..

SKC


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SKC

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Re: PBA Platinum..
« Reply #1 on: May 14, 2009, 09:53:36 AM »

Lol..

Helpful..

That's not what i hope, but what i think.. If that's the case i hope the new one he's ordered lasts longer..

Anyone else?


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Tough times don't last, tough people do...

Aggression is an attitude, not an emotion...


burly1

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Re: PBA Platinum..
« Reply #2 on: May 14, 2009, 10:00:15 AM »
I would try a resurface, if he has not done that already. It could just have a good lane shine in the track area, and therefore the reaction would be different than new, it is worth a try before it is pronounced dead.
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Patrick

Juggernaut

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Re: PBA Platinum..
« Reply #3 on: May 15, 2009, 09:13:45 PM »
Several things can cause a ball to "die". From oil saturation to clogged pores and surface prep.

  If the cover isn't oil soaked, it is possible that the microscopic pores in the coverstock have become clogged with dirt and debris from poor lane maintenance. Microscopic particles of dirt can be carried onto the ball and when the oil soaks in, the dirt becomes clogged/lodged into the pores, causing them to lose their oil dissipation abilities.

 Another scenario is this. The coverstocks on some of todays modern balls "reacts" badly with some chemical formulations and can actually shrink the pores in the coverstock enough that they are no longer able to absorb the oil from the balls surface, effectively killing the balls oil handling capabilities. ACETONE is one of these, I had to learn that the hard way.

  Have the ball taken down to a very low grit ( 500 abralon or lower) and then have it bled out and resurfaced. If that doesn't return it to its former glory, it is most likely never going to be brought back to that level again.


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