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Author Topic: cracking ball  (Read 4822 times)

JohnN

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cracking ball
« on: March 26, 2018, 02:20:49 PM »
I store my older bowling balls on a wood rack in my basement. The temperature is a constant 65*.No direct sunlight. Every week or so if I go down there to do something I move the balls around. I have had two balls crack. A DV8 Endless Nightmare and now a DV8 Thug Unruly. Both cracked all the way around the ball. I have 2 older Brunswick balls and a DV8 Ruckus Feud on the rack. Any reason for the cracking and anything that can be done to stop it ?

 

charlest

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Re: cracking ball
« Reply #16 on: March 27, 2018, 11:42:10 AM »
I'm having a hard time believing that rotating balls, avoiding wooden racks, and sacrificing chickens will protect a bowling ball that has already experienced throws onto a lane (thump) into multiple wooden pins (thumpity thump thump), stop suddenly after 65'+ (thwap), and returned back through the metal ball returns.

C'mon, get your sacrificing right. You need to sacrifice goat entrails ion your keyboard.:)

Quote
Since this activity doesn't often crack a ball from the outside, I'm guessing it's probably more how temperature/humidity changes affect the different composite densities and applied to irregularities in manufacturing.


It's not the densities of the 3 materials, coverstock, filler, and core that cracks them. It's their different rates of expansion, when subject to rapid changes in humidity and temperature, that can cause them to crack.
« Last Edit: March 27, 2018, 12:43:53 PM by charlest »
"None are so blind as those who will not see."

Overhand

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Re: cracking ball
« Reply #17 on: March 27, 2018, 12:13:58 PM »
I'm having a hard time believing that rotating balls, avoiding wooden racks, and sacrificing chickens will protect a bowling ball that has already experienced throws onto a lane (thump) into multiple wooden pins (thumpity thump thump), stop suddenly after 65'+ (thwap), and returned back through the metal ball returns.

C'mon, get your sacrificing right. You need to sacrifice goat entrails ion your keyboard.

Quote
Since this activity doesn't often crack a ball from the outside, I'm guessing it's probably more how temperature/humidity changes affect the different composite densities and applied to irregularities in manufacturing.


It's not the densities of the 3 materials, coverstock, filler, and core that cracks them. It's their different rates of expansion, when subject to rapid changes in humidity and temperature, that can cause them to crack.

Concur; that was the intended thought...

...and also concur goats work as well as chickens.