Very good explanation - technical, but that's what is actually working on the ball. In a nutshell, the ball's rotational axis migrates from the initial axis (which is indicated by the individual PAP of the player, which is simply a point on the ball surface measured from the grip center reference point to make it comparable between players) towards the core's final stable rotational axis, the PSA.
How fast or early this happens is defined by the core's relative position to the PAP, which is by intent instable upon the release to exploit this migration though the rotational powers on the highest RG axis of the core for flare and hook. A core in a strong position will cause most hook (leverage position, 3 3/8" from PAP, actually a 45° placement towards the PAP axis), but also early, and it depletes the core's energy though rotation, esp. when the cover has to work with friction on the lane. A strong MB in a core will enhance this migrational force, and can be exploited to emphasize a desired reaction shape.
That said, there is IMHO a fine balance between the core's properties, its setup through drilling, the coverstock material, the surface preparation, the bowler's speed, the lane condition, even lane surface material and air humidity that goes together. Therefore, just drilling a ball to hook the most will in most cases "not work", esp. with the very strong modern stuff. Less is in many cases more, but it takes time to find out what works well, and it is just as hard for a good pro shop to determine what a player actually needs to be happy.
I also get the best reactions with pin positions above the fingers and 4-5" from PAP. With my lower speed and medium revs I need length and a delayed action. I also retired most of my strong MB material, esp. most Morich balls. Not because they are bad - but I found them limited in use. While the hook is spectacular, the end results are a bit so so and very condition specific. If all matches up, these things have been hell on wheels for me. But if not, or through lane transition: crap. Too risky for tournament or league. Consequently, I replaced my active arsenal step by step with "simpler" balls, and for me they are much more versatile, giving me more options and also room for error - less guesswork and gambling.
--------------------
DizzyFugu - Reporting from Germany
Confused by bowling?
Check out BR.com's vault of wisdom: the unofficial FAQ section