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Author Topic: Time Bomb  (Read 10142 times)

admin

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Time Bomb
« on: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM »
Ball NPS Score: 100.00
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Color: Camouflage Green/ Brown Pearl
Coverstock: Pure Explosion
Core: Hour Glass Inverted Diamond
Hook Rating: 115 out of 125 max
Flare Potential: 5"+
Backend Hook: 95%
Construction: Modified 3-Piece
15lb Rg Min: 2.571
15lb Diff: 0.055
Finish: 2000 Grit Abralon

 

JessN16

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Re: Time Bomb
« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2010, 03:45:16 AM »
The ball: 15 pounds, 4-inch pin, 2 oz. top
The drill: Pin over bridge, CG about 1.5 inches under ring. Works out to a 4.5 x 3.5 drill for me. Surface is box grit (2000 Abralon) plus ReactionPlus polish
Me: Tweener revs, good speed, high axis rotation with average tilt. PAP of 4 over 3/8 up.

---

Bought this ball for the fact it was a pearl, and that it had a strong coverstock, plus its high-RG nature would give me something I'm not used to having in my bag. Wanting to get a good look at it, I decided not to trick up the drill pattern and instead went with an old standby for me, pin over the bridge and CG directly down from the ring an inch or two.

First test bed was on Kegel High Street, with pretty good oil volume. I was expecting some strength, even with the polish, but I wasn't expecting quite this much. This ball is very versatile across different levels of oil, particularly with the surface polished.

But what really caught my eye was the way the ball revved up downlane, thanks to the high-RG core. This ball lopes through the heads, but when it revs, it makes a deliberate and very strong move in. The high-RG nature gives it a different look than the classic Lane #1 look of early-rev, midlane control ball.

However, I was pleasantly surprised with the control I did have. Even with polish, this ball didn't snap indiscriminately off the dry. It controls the breakpoint very well and doesn't surprise you much.

Second test bed for this ball was Kegel Easy Street, a typical THS, and it does the requisite hitting-like-a-truck so long as there is sufficient length and volume in the oil pattern.

In box grit with no polish, there's definitely a point where you have to bag it. The ball is not usable on anything south of medium when in box condition. With polish, medium-light is in play but the ball still shines on true mediums to medium-heavy.

In fact, this ball almost acts like some of Storm's famous strong pearls. I'm most reminded of how the original X-Factor looked when it first hit shelves. It was a pearl, but much stronger than any other pearl of its era.

The cover strength, coupled with its tuneability and control, make this ball a must-have for tournaments. This is also the most versatile Lane #1 ball I've had in quite awhile, able to play on a variety of oil volumes and concentrations. This core is a perfect match to the overlying 900Global coverstock. In short, it's one of the best balls I've bought in years.

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The good: Unique look due to high-RG nature, versatile, takes cover changes easily

The bad: Cover colors are a bit off-putting for some, not for use on floods, too strong for many THS shots without a lot of surface modification

Overall: The best ball yet from the 900Global era at Lane #1

Jess

elvismat

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Re: Time Bomb
« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2011, 07:56:16 AM »
LANE CONDITION

Length: 38 foot.
 
Volume: Med - heavy.

Type (THS, Sport Pattern etc):

 
COMMENTS

Likes: Transition after it flips.

Dislikes: None so far.

 
PICTURES AND/OR VIDEOS
 
 Originally had this ball drilled pin above ring finger, weight hole about 45 degrees.  It was over/under and hated, almost threw it away.  Had it re-drilled, stack leverage, double thumb weight hole, this was the key.  The ball gives me a nice read, not once was there over/under.  Great recovery playing deep or from the outside.  Pin carry was very good, great mix and drive.
 
I will re-post in a few weeks, just for a follow up.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



ericfox4

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Re: Time Bomb
« Reply #3 on: February 06, 2011, 05:05:19 PM »
LANE CONDITION
synthetic
Length:38
 
Volume:medium

Type (THS, Sport Pattern etc):ths out of bounds around 8

 
COMMENTS

Likes:the ease that this ball gets down the lane turns the corner and roars to the pocket ball carrys great . works well on pretty much every shot, although i would hesitate to use on flooded conditions

Dislikes: none at all

 
PICTURES AND/OR VIDEOS
 
 
 



zeusjr

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Re: Time Bomb
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2011, 09:43:41 AM »

BOX SPECS
Ball Weight15lbs 2oz
Top Weight4.0 oz
Pin Length - 3-4”

DRILL PATTERN
60 deg x 5” x 30 deg
Ending Static Weights- 2.0oz TOP, 0.5oz Side, 0.75oz Finger, No X-Hole

BOWLER STYLE
Ball Speed17+ MPH
PAP/Track4 1/2” Right 3/4” Up

PICTURE
http://home.comcast.net/~BandRBowling/TimeBomb.jpg
http://home.comcast.net/~BandRBowling/TimeBomb2.jpg

SURFACE PREPARATION
OoB

COMMENTS

Wow!! I was very surprised at the reaction of this ball. I was expecting it to fall in line under the Curve. What I found was that this ball maybe even stronger then the Big Curve. The TimeBomb is definitely stronger off the break point where the Big Curve has a more smooth transition. The Big Curve should still be the heavy oil piece as it starts sooner in the oil, but time will tell. It has similar length to the Curve but a sharper break point. The TimeBomb has the biggest backend reaction of any Lane#1 ball I can remember. 
 

Thus far I have thrown three 300 games since the release of the TimeBomb and she continues to be my go to ball.


My bowling site: http://home.comcast.net/~BandRBowling
My eBay site: http://shop.ebay.com/merchant/zeusjr73