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Author Topic: Trauma Recovery  (Read 22909 times)

admin

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Trauma Recovery
« on: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM »
Coverstock: PRO-Thane MT plus (particle)

Finish: 1500-grit Polish

RG: 2.514 (Low)

Differential: .0492 (High)

Flare Potential: High (7” plus)

Hook Potential: 24

Available Weights: 12 - 16

Lane Condition: Medium to heavy oil

 

rick stubbs

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #46 on: May 13, 2002, 04:12:35 PM »
I just had my Trauma Recovery plugged and re-dilled,from off label to pin by ring finger and mass bias kicked out to my pap. Wow, what a difference!I did not beleive how much moving the mass bias around affects the Trauma line. The ball sailed down the lane, and made a strong move to the pocket. I have since bought another Trauma and put the mb in between the two other Traumas.These are some of the best balls I have ever thrown.I typically by 10 to15 balls a year, those days are over!A big thanks to Scott and JT in the pro shop.

Michael

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #47 on: May 18, 2002, 03:10:06 PM »
I just recently had this ball given to me. It had very low milage and we redrilled it. We layed it out 5x4 the pin wound up just above my ring finger and the cg kicked out slightly with a x-hole 5 in. from my center of grip. We took it back to negative ( I believe it was somewhere around a quarter).  Then we took it and polished it up with some power house factory finish.  For me this ball rolled great I absolutely love the reaction. For me the reaction was more of a hook set.  The ball has great hitting power.  When I moved in around 20 this ball still had quite a bit of bite to it on a house shot (not yet tested on a sport shot) I do suppose it will be a good sport shot ball just because it can handle some oil.  All in all I would reccomend this ball for any stroker or tweener, crankers now they may have some trouble if there are not many units of oil out there.

Good Luck and Good Bowling,
Michael

laner7pin

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #48 on: May 22, 2002, 11:17:40 PM »
Once again, I have bought yet another bowling ball from Storm, and for the Nth time it is awesome. Recovery 15 lbs, stacked drilling with a balance hole. Put a little shine on the ball, I believe it was the Storm polish number 3, to give it a little more length. Compares right now to my Erase-it which is dulled up pretty good as far as hook, but the Recovery has more backend and tears the pins apart. As Pedersen would say on ESPN, "there's shrapnel all oer the lane". Only put 2 games on it so far, had to get outta the way for a summer league and if I dont leave 3 7 pins and 1 washout (testing out how deep I could get) I would have gone 230, 260 easily. Carry is excellent, couple flat 7's which was me missing by 1 board. My "house" shot is a 40' top hat, 10 to 10 spread. Was playing between 3rd and 4th arrow getting out to about 5-6 before it comes back at the breakpoint. Once I play with the surface a little more I could probably get in 5 more boards, or shine it to glass and move 5 more out. Will post another review once I get more games and more shots on it. Until then 9 out of 10 for sure. Once again, great job Storm!

                                     Eric Lane
                                         "erock666"

Michael

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #49 on: June 06, 2002, 12:45:23 AM »
I had this ball give to me about a month ago. Have been enjoying it since! We layed this ball out with the pin over the ring finger and swung the cg and mass bias out a little. Put some ebonite factory finish on it and went at it. A little not we left about a quarter of negative side in it. This ball really turns over. It reacts great. Not squirty at all on oil in fact it takes to oil great. I have found it actually carries better when the outsides are burned and you half to move in around the 5 arrow this ball doesn't lose anything. I would reccomend this ball for anyone just for crankers watchout for burned backends.
Good Luck and Good Bowling,
Michael

Elite_Digger

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #50 on: June 07, 2002, 11:27:17 PM »
Well, this is my first review of a ball here....Got this ball to replace an aging Ebonite Grey Wolf (500+ games) The wolf still worked pretty good, but wasn't getting the carry. I had one night where I had only 1 open the whole night but only 4 strikes...couldn't carry a strike to save my butt so I thought I'd try a new ball. Decided after reading alot of reviews I'd go with the Recovery. I'm a 190+ average bowler, medium speed, medium revs, and had this 16 lb ball drilled leverage I believe. (Pin under and slightly right of my ring finger) Anyway I had mixed results with it ....I liked the carry I got with it, seemed to get a pretty good hit in the pocket, but it seemed like it was very sensitive to speed and carry down. I bowled one good series with it (696) but had 5 below average series with it. Not sure if it was the drilling, but my Grey Wolf actually out hooked this ball. Not what I wanted!
I have a 15 lb. Voodoo on order to replace it.... I'm sure the Recovery is a great ball, but not for me...Lol, did like the Peppermint smell though...kept my bag smellin fresh
Never argue with an IDIOT...they'll drag you down to their level and beat you with EXPERIENCE!

Current lineup:Motive Jackal LE, Motiv Forza, RotoGrip Defiant Soul, Storm Reign, Jack Daniels Vis (spare)

JOE FALCO

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #51 on: June 13, 2002, 10:11:25 AM »
This is my first try at a STORM product. Wih the help
of MIKE CIMBA (from the PRO SHOP at NESBITS' LANES in PA),
I picked this ball up over the Web.

I've watched others use STORM balls with GREAT success and
didn't think one could help me. Mike convinced me that I
should try the ball. He drilled it up from specs I had
delevered to him earlier and within a week I had the ball.

First time out (two days ago) I was at a BUFFALOE BOWLING
CENTER in CARY, NC where the allies were dry as a bone. The ball
had no reaction at all. Bowled a little below average, but was not
discourages knowing what I was bowling on.

Next day (yesterday)went to a different house (PLEASANT VALLEY,
RALEIGH) where the allies were freshly oiled. The ball had a
FANTASTIC reaction .. I hit 248 - 222 - 214 for a 684 series.
It should have been a 700+ series but I had two misses in the
2nd game and 1 miss in the third game.

The ball is one that should be in your arsenal. I suggest if you
bowl in an UN-OILED condition .. stay away .. other wise .. GET ONE!

Thanks MIKE .. you sure know your stuff!!
RIP Thongprincess/Sawbones!

laner7pin

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #52 on: June 23, 2002, 06:58:38 AM »
This is an update on the Recovery, I have put a few games on it with sport shot and house shot patterns and here are some results:

House Shot: After testing it for 2 games before league I found it had more backend than my Erase-it, which is drilled at 11:00 (lefty) and has a ton of backend. Went out couple weeks ago and threw this for 5 games, playing different shots and lines to see which is best. First I played my "normal" shot for the house, between 3rd and 4th out to about 5-8, and watch it come back. Result; flush or 7 pin. If I pulled it it would hold a little, but go through the face. If I dropped it or pushed it out too far, washout, or bucket. Have area with this ball from here, but if it is extreme then no chance. After that I tried more inside, slowed down a bit covered more boards and I noticed it left flat 7's. Moved 10 boards right, played 2-3rd arrow and more speed, lots of messangers, lots of strikes. moved a little more right, piped it up 5 and it went through the face or brookyn, so I know deep in, or deep out wont work for with this ball. Overall, lots of strikes and 7 pins.
Next I went to the sport shot, my monday night league. First shot on it was the ABC shot from this year, and I either had to play 4th arrow out to almost the 2-3 board, or put it in the bag. Not enough oil for me. Next shot we were on is a "special" shot, one the mechanic put out (he didnt bowl this week either) and it was either 2-3rd arrow out, or a ton of speed outside of that. Found a good shot, little swing area after they opened up, 837 for 4 not bad.

Overall this ball is great, it covers boards, you can play different lines with it and it works well on both sport shots and house patterns. Recommend this ball to anybody needing something for Medium to Medium-Heavy Oil.

                  Eric Lane
                     erock666

shimozukawa

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #53 on: June 29, 2002, 05:14:25 PM »
After my Response cracked, I returned it to Storm, and they sent me a Recovery by mistake. I notified them of the error, but I opted to keep the Recovery since I never liked the Response anyway.

I can only rave about the Recovery. It gives me the same read as my El Nino X-It (which is 1000-grit sanded), only 8 boards tighter. It's hilarious. If I'm ever in that non-enviable situation of having one lane a lot drier than the other, I can just throw my X-It on the drier lane while playing nearly the same line on the tight lane.

This is definitely an oil ball, but it's on the tame end of the spectrum.
As the heads begin to break-down, and your aggressive balls start checking-up at the arrows, this is an excellent ball to turn to.

Dry: 3. While the ball does have a pearlized coverstock, it is still far to aggressive to be used as a dry lane ball.

Medium: 7. The ball works on medium volumes very well, but there are better choices specifically for medium lanes.

Oil: 7.5. The ball was designed for oil, but there are more aggressive options out there for when the lanes are fresh and long.

Versatility: 9.5. The Recovery is extremely versitile, and should work well as a read ball (first ball out of the bag). It's quite handy when the lanes start to break down, transitioning from oily to medium.

Overall: 21 cans out of a case. (Love the Blue, Burgandy, Silver pearl choice! Go Storm!)

UNObowler01

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #54 on: June 29, 2002, 10:59:28 PM »
See profile for my specs..

This is one of my first experiments with 16 pound equipment.  I usually stay with Columbia, but my armswing has been really eratic lately, and the extra pound really feels good.  This was my boss's ball from the pro shop I work in.  All I had to do was change the grips, because our hands are very similar sizes.   Layout is a 4 1/2 by 4 1/2 or so, pin above ring finger, cg slightly swung out, mc2 (mass bias) about 2 inches right of thumb.  No x-hole.

Not a bad ball at all!  The boss never liked it much, but I put alot more hand in the ball than he does, and I think its pretty good.  Gets down the lane easy, never once tried to check up in the heads.  Smooth, strong turn on the backend, good hit.  Haven't put many games on it, but threw 4 practice games to see what I was in for.  Condition was left over from Friday night's league, this was a Saturday afternoon.  Some carrydown, but the shot started as 38 feet buffed to 42, out of bounds outside 5, and decent backends.  As I said, it was a little carried down, but the Recovery was still recovering, and hooking right into the pocket.  Sliding on 20, pitching over 15 at the arrows, out to about 7 and hitting the pocket pretty easily.  224-247-232-215.  

The ball fits my style well, and should be good medium condtion ball to go to when my TiBoss 2 hooks too early.  9 out of 10 for this one, loses the point because it really doesn't carry too well in the swish zone.
J. J. Mastny
Mens Head Coach
University of Nebraska Omaha Bowling
STORM/ROTOGRIP COLLEGIATE PROGRAM 2008-2009

Greatness

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #55 on: July 06, 2002, 04:59:30 PM »
Got this one used also.  2-3" pin drilled with pin above and between fingers,  cg in the grip, and the mass bias is right of the thumb 2".  Polished 2000.

I would have to say this will be my go to mid oil ball.  The drill really fits my style.  Many balls i have hook hard to the pocket and deflect so they end up going straight thru around the 5 pin spot.  This ball seems to turn over a different way and as soon as it hits the 1-3 pocket, it drives straight thru the rack and is closer to the 8 pin.  Very devastating.  Eventhough it hits very deep and hard, very few 9 and 10 pins.  This is not a good ball for heavy oil or heavy carrydown.  It needs lighter backends to make the proper pop on the end.  Carrydown makes it squirty because of the polish.

Greatness

Trauma Line

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #56 on: July 12, 2002, 06:50:10 PM »
I can throw it anywhere right of the 1-3 pocket and it always recovers well into the pocket. And if it doesn't hit directly into the pocket, but lightly hits it, the pins will shuffle and still give me a strike. Brooklyn shots will also give me a strike. The really only bad thing is that it absorbs alot of oil but I can atleast see my track.And it is hard to wipe off all of the oil, but it doesn't bother me because rather or not it has oil on it, it is still as reliable as ever.

onefour02

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #57 on: August 07, 2002, 09:46:08 AM »
my trauma recovery works great on medium to heavy oil lanes with backend.
i throw the ball from 5th board to 2nd arrow and the ball hooks in a little and kaboom! the pins fly.
i enjoy the great pin action, the domino effect when i dont get a perfect strike and end up with those lucky strikes.
BUT when there's carrydown, there's simply not enough hook for my already minimum hooking shot and would have to start playing a sparing game.
guess i need a stronger ball, maybe a shock trauma, in these times.

Mongo

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #58 on: September 16, 2002, 01:17:47 PM »
I've wanted one of these for myself and have just now gotten around to punching one up.  

Specs:
15 lb.
3 " pin
3 1/2 oz. TW

Drill specs:
5 1/2 X 5 (pin over bridge)
3/4 oz. positive side
MB directly below thumb
Box finish

I've been really impressed by the Recovery's smooth power.  I was looking for something for times when I needed something to turn the corner on carrydown, but not too flippy.  

One thing I've noticed after throwing this ball on a couple of conditions (fresh house and late block dry with no heads) is that the Recovery has to have some oil up front to perform.  Even with the pearlized cover, the particle surface will read dry and burn out on fried heads.  However, as long as you have push up front, the Recovery is an excellent piece of equipment.  With its cover, this Trauma will go longer than the ER, but much earlier than the original Trauma.  Its reaction is strong and smooth, no flip, but a hard curve.  As far as Storm equipment goes, think of an Eraser that hooks about 5-7 boards more and 2-3 feet earlier.  

I really like this ball.  I actually could see it as a first out of the bag type of ball given it's smooth reaction (I'm sticking to my Remedy for that, though) and amount of hook.  A strong member of the Trauma family.  Storm continues to produce new equipment that is distinctly different from its other equipment and, at the same time, compliments its other equipment.
Where are all my 2001-2006 posts?

CaughtbySTORM

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #59 on: October 01, 2002, 01:18:56 PM »
It's a great ball, just doesn't fit me too well.  Incredibly strong though, it'll carry everything if you get it near the pocket, the best ball I've had in that respect.  Smooth arcing backend.  On normal house conditions, this ball is the one to use.  Only problems are it picks up too hard on dry, and not enough on oil.  If the backends are a little wet, it starts to turn and then just slides.  If you can play the middle, or right off the gutter and in, it's incredible, very predictable.  Strokers will have a problem (like I do) with it if the lanes force you to play an inside out line.  But if you have the power and crank to push it through the dry, you won't leave a pin standing.

Michael

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Re: Trauma Recovery
« Reply #60 on: October 20, 2002, 02:39:29 PM »
I just recently drilled another one of these! And this one reacts even better than the first one. We layed it out with the pin over the fingers and swung the cg and mass bias out about an inch to a inch and a half. First I took some storm extras #2 to it and then some storm extra shine. This ball rolls great! We put a small hole on my pap which is 5 1/8 over and 1/8 up. This ball rolls very good when the heads are fresh and you need to move a little right, the angle just aids this ball and helps it carry. Haven't tested her on a sport shot yet, but first chance we get we will do just that. This would be a very good ball for a stroker, tweener, and there have been a few crankers from around here that have liked it. Until next time!
Good Luck and Good Bowling,
Michael