I can't help but wonder if I made mistake in buying the Eraser, as opposed to any one of the Power Grooves, especially the stronger ones (Proactive and Reactive Sanded).
To start from the beginning:
The house I bowl at is extremely oily...like nothing I've seen before. I've bowled quite a few times (I'll estimate several dozen) at many different locations, before finding the house I currently bowl at (it has really cheap, early-bird Sunday rates). So, I'm fairly confident that I can call these lanes 'extremely oily'. For example, the oil on the floor, before the line, is very slippery and very glossy. With some exaggeration, one cannot walk around on any part of the floor without slipping and sliding around, as if walking on ice. It's also the beginning of the day, so no one has used the lane before me.
Doing some research on the web, I saw many, many suggestions for beginners to get a Power Groove. I had been shooting with my first drilled ball (plastic) and was ready to try a performance ball. After looking through Brunswick's bowling page, I was fairly excited about getting the black Proactive Power Groove, as it seemed to be just what I needed, and it looked kind of cool.
I went to the shop that I got my plastic ball at, and told the shopkeeper that I was looking for my first performance ball, and that the lanes I bowl on are very oily. His strongest suggestion was for the Eraser Blaze, $135 for ball and drilling. He suggested three or four other balls, all around the same price, say between $130 and $150. I was too much of a coward to ask about the three, different-colored Power Grooves at the other end of the shelf, in the top corner, all with $90 price tags showing. My roommate came with me, however, and he wasn't at all shy about asking. The shop owner said they were all good balls, but then reaffirmed his suggestion for a couple of the higher-priced balls. After being excited about the Power Groove, for some reason, I still got the Eraser Blaze.
Now, it's not like the shop owner tried selling me one of the Storm X balls or some kind of an Inferno or whatever, but still I can't help but wonder if I had been stupid to buy what I did. I'm not sure if one of the Power Grooves he had was Proactive or Reactive Sanded, but even if he only had non-sanded Reactives, wouldn't this be a better ball to get then the Eraser Blaze? I've read reviews here and elsewhere, and not one has stated that the EB is a good ball for heavy oil, and many have stated it's a poor ball for heavy oil. So even if I had gotten a medium-oil Power Groove, I still would have saved myself $45. I have a very strict budget (I'm a student who can't afford to be in school right now).
My question, in summary, is: For those who have any kind of experience with the Eraser Blaze and a Power Groove, do you think I wasted my money?
Sorry for the long post, but my concern has been getting stronger and stronger, and after letting it sit for a long while, it has all come gushing out.