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Author Topic: Trifecta Drilled Wrong?  (Read 924 times)

fins4ever88

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Trifecta Drilled Wrong?
« on: March 29, 2006, 12:53:48 PM »
Well I was reading a post a couple weeks ago that drilling the RAD on the left side of the thumb hole for a righty was not the way a ball is supposed to be drilled. So me and my brother go bowling today and I pick up his Trifecta, and lo-and-behold, I notice the RAD is on the left side of his thumb. We've noticed that the Trifecta does not perform as well as my Vertigo does, though I've heard it's supposed to. Could this be the reason why? We don't tell our driller any specific way to drill, just give him the ball and let him do his stuff (plus, we don't know much about it).

Like I said, I don't know much about drilling but I swear I heard a couple weeks ago on this forum that having the RAD on the left for a righty is just not the way to go to get the correct reaction.

Pic of the drilling...
http://img93.imageshack.us/img93/7788/trifectadrilling4uy.jpg

Thanks for the help in advance.
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Wallshot

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Re: Trifecta Drilled Wrong?
« Reply #1 on: March 29, 2006, 09:18:37 PM »
Actually, this is what I call a controlled drilling. If the back ends are snappy and the heads are drying up it's a good layout. Last year we had a sub that was just killing the lanes all night long. He was throwing a xxx factor drilled with the MB to the left of the thumb, cg at midline and pin above and to the right of the ring finger. I have an X-It (shiny) drilled this way and although I rarely use it anymore I did throw it last year and it was my savior in many a 3rd game in league. However, if you're expecting a skid snap,or, heavy midlane kind of reaction this is not the layout to use. A friend of mne who was a touring pro at one time just began drilling some of his equipment with the thumb drilled right through the mass bias. The reaction is similar to your layout in that it produces a very smooth, elongated arc.

Obviously though you're not happy with your balls reaction and yes, it most likely is the layout. Plug her up and try a more conventional pattern geared for the reaction you desire. There's a ton of info on the web to assist you in determining what layouts might suit you best.

To say drillig the MB to the left of the thumb is wrong is misleading. It all depends on the coverstock,lane condition and your style.

fins4ever88

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Re: Trifecta Drilled Wrong?
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2006, 09:38:40 PM »
quote:
all my balls drilled with that layout are very easy to control, works well on meduim lane condition


Thank you both for the help. I knew it seemed weird that it's classified as a "Heavy" oil ball, but he can only really use it well on more medium patterns. Good thing we got him a GP2, too, for those heavier patterns.

I was just wondering if it really had an adverse effect, and apparently it doesn't.

Thanks for all the help!
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dizzyfugu

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Re: Trifecta Drilled Wrong?
« Reply #3 on: March 30, 2006, 12:37:45 AM »
MB/PSA/RAD on the negative side of the ball is a label drilling. It generally tames down the back end reaction, improves mid lane. Eitehr suitable for oily conditions when you need control, or for late games when things dry up.
The ball will probably not move dramatically in any way, which might lead to disappointment. But the ball saves a lot of energy this way and is easy to control, since it will break in the midlane, make its move (rather arcing) and go straight for the pocket with good hit and carry. It is worth having such a ball in the bag, since it might bail you out when the snappy stuff suffers from over/under reactions or stronger drillings start burning out.

Additionally, putting the MB close to your track is only (or mostly) a danger for high track players and balls with a strong MB. On a low MB ball, this drilling is safe, on a high MB ball you might track over the thumb hole or even create negative flare which totally messes up ball reaction.

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Edited on 3/30/2006 1:39 AM
DizzyFugu ~ Reporting from Germany