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Author Topic: fire road coverstock  (Read 9860 times)

jfvstorm5

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fire road coverstock
« on: January 07, 2013, 12:44:12 AM »
anyone else see it get insanely oily fast? and almost reacts like a pearl urethane cover?

 

charlest

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #16 on: January 07, 2013, 04:09:43 PM »
Is this on the OOB finish or after the polish has been scuffed? Sounds like Storm finished with too much polish on a couple of batches. One of my teammates has the Fire Road and it hooks a ton without getting slimy like y'all make it sound.

I pointed my friend to this discussion as he hasn't mentioned his FR in weeks. He gave up on it. Polished both his and his wife's hardly moved. He gave his to his 22/23 year old son; we'll see how he does with it.
"None are so blind as those who will not see."

jfvstorm5

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #17 on: January 07, 2013, 06:21:58 PM »
didnt break the cover of mine yet, but did to two friends of mine and didnt see much of a difference.

J_Mac

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #18 on: January 07, 2013, 08:26:42 PM »
Clean it with acetone... What have you got to lose?

tburky

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #19 on: January 07, 2013, 09:15:37 PM »
I drilled my fire road pin above fingers with cg stacked on grip line.  The ball is really too clean for use on fresh.  Ball rolls better for me when lanes are broken down. I've had this ball for a while but unsure if I want to hand scuff cover with 4000. Undecided where this ball needs to fit in my arsenal.

jfvstorm5

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #20 on: January 08, 2013, 10:35:39 AM »
i will try acetone later tonight after i close. i usually only have to use acetone if the ball has belt marks and scuffs on it. usually tac-up ball cleaner works like a charm, but will definitely try that and a light 3000 by hand and see how they both work out.

jfvstorm5

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #21 on: January 10, 2013, 12:52:40 AM »
tried some acetone, same thing just took a tad bit of shine off but same result.. doesnt seem like an issue of coverstock finish.. just how it was actually made.

StormTechDept

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #22 on: January 10, 2013, 03:46:57 PM »
Hi Everyone,

Customer support and happy customers is very important to us here at Storm. Please contact us directly at 1800-369-4402 or at tech@stormbowling.com if you have any questions/concerns with any equipment.

Thank you,

Storm Tech Staff

Bigmike

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #23 on: January 14, 2013, 12:09:02 PM »
My out of box experience was that the FR was a little squirty for my style of play. Now this is not new to me as I tend to have to take factory shined balls and take them down to get the shine off and then bring them back up. I just like to know that I can replicate a surface if it rolls well for my game. I always try to see what the factory finish or shine rolls like first then make the changes. This is more for reference for customers or fellow "Storm and Roto heads". :)

I had some sort of film on mine also when I drilled it and threw it the first few times. I remembered my experience sometimes with factory reacta-shine balls and immediately hit it with a 4000 pad with a little "lean" on it. Totally different ball reaction. The squirtiness went away and the ball picked up consistantly at the spot.

If I recall most ball companies put a factory finish on a release because their testing indicates where they want to try and place a ball in their line-up. Most of the ball buying public does not educate themselves on sites like this to learn they are allowed to experiment with finish and surface. Try some different surfaces, take it back down to 500 and bring it back up. See if that changes things.

I know from personal experience, it has changed my perspective on a ball immediately and kept me from shelving a potential must have ball.
"Tell me Cup, how does a great ball striker like you shoot an 83? Well I lipped out this putt on 18......"

Mike Craig - Storm Bowling Amateur Staff - Westerville, OH

billdozer

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #24 on: January 14, 2013, 02:40:13 PM »
I do what big mike does...if you dont like it change the surface...its not like any of us mere mortals can replicate storm oob surface...i keep fishing til i get a bite!  Keep trying til you get the right surface..

Can u post a pic of what u see on your FR?
In the bag [Infinite Physix, Volatility Torque, Night Road, Phaze III, Burner Solid, Hustle AU]
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jfvstorm5

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #25 on: January 14, 2013, 11:45:50 PM »
i will try to get a picture up tomorrow or wednesday night, and i have changed the surface. i took it down to 3000 with a new pad and left it at that and i got the same result, just not as fast. the cover seems to just not be able to handle oil. if i throw more than a certain number of shots in a given time frame, the surface stays oily and has a film on it, and doesnt come off when cleaning it, but goes away over night. but while bowling, it can only handle x amount if shots until it stops moving

completebowler

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #26 on: January 15, 2013, 07:15:17 AM »
Seems very strange. That is a tried and true cover from Storm. I would contact them directly as they suggested and see what they recommend. Years ago they clued me in to how they get their factory covers to the OOB surface before it was as widely advertised as it is now.

jls

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Re: fire road coverstock
« Reply #27 on: January 16, 2013, 10:11:53 AM »
Have seen similar problems with the Fire Road...

IMO the ball was to highly sanded...

Knocked the cover back to 2000 pad...then applied the polish...

Also put a weight hole at 45 degrees from the center of grip even with the top
of the thumb hole...a 1" bit about 1" deep...{ if a weight hole was not already in
ball }

Problem seems to be solved...