In the BIG picture of things, the core actually means NOTHING as far as striking goes. The core itsself has NOTHING to do with the pins, the C.O.R., or the pins interacting. The core makes NO strikes. Strikes are created by the balls interaction with the pins.
This being said, what the core DOES do, is allow balls to create sharper entry angles from deeper positions on the lane. They let balls take full advantage of the aggressive coverstocks that have been created, also allowing them to do this in much higher volumes and lengths of oil.
Striking is merely a function of getting the ball into the pocket area at the proper entry angle with enough rolling force to maintain the proper trajectory through the pindeck. It doesn't matter what the cover is or what the core is. If you could get it into the pocket with enough angle and roll, anything will strike, cores just make it possible to generate these forces from angles not seen before and with less effort than ever before.
There were 300's, 800's, and even a 900, long before the advent of reactive resin and gyroscopic weightblocks, just less of them because it was harder to generate enough roll and entry angle with enough force and precision to strike on a day-in day-out basis.
P.S. You take me back to the 1980's and I'll show you how to score off the five board with a pancake cored Columbia Yellow dot.
( I miss the 80's )
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Norm Duke was right Good transactions list in my profile
My Bowl.com member pageEdited on 2/2/2009 7:33 PM