win a ball from Bowling.com

Author Topic: Weight block in 11lb. Twist?  (Read 9525 times)

thedjs

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1017
Weight block in 11lb. Twist?
« on: February 20, 2020, 03:14:06 PM »
Due to a shoulder injury my wife is dropping to 11lb. balls and we were looking at the Twist since she hooks the ball quite a bit and we're bowling on dry lanes.  In looking at the Brunswick site it looks like the only "weight block" in the 11lb Twist is just a cut-out that is shaped like a slice of pie.  Does that mean it has no traditional weight block?  Will it work as well without one?  Need some help from some of you guys that understand this kind of stuff.

 

BowlingForDonuts

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1120
Re: Weight block in 11lb. Twist?
« Reply #1 on: February 20, 2020, 03:22:05 PM »
Yep no core whatsoever not even a pancake.  .002 diff.  IMO at 11lb, core doesn't matter a whole lot anyway as most 11lb balls RG is over 2.7 approaching 2.8.  My wife has a 10lb blue hammer remake which has a core and it carries a little better than plastic without but not a lot better (she basically throws the ball dead straight).  The reactive cover on a twist will help with carry more than anything imo.
« Last Edit: February 20, 2020, 04:36:25 PM by BowlingForDonuts »
Here today.  Gone tomorrow.

bowling_rebel

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 159
Re: Weight block in 11lb. Twist?
« Reply #2 on: February 20, 2020, 03:37:03 PM »
Once  you go under 15 pounds, people need to read the actual differential and RG of the ball they are getting. Even some 14 pounds balls are very different. That doesn't make these necessarily lesser balls, but you can't go by the typical descriptions and reviews which assume 15 pounds.

Lower weights will often have (but now always) have lower differential (less flare)
They all have higher RG - takes longer for ball to go from skin to roll.

An 11 pound twist has a differential of 0.002

With differentials - once you get less than 0.015 there is going to be very little track flare. The 11 pound twist has no weight block, it will not flare. The ball will pick up oil, and then track over that oil down lane, making the ball hook even less.

If a high rev, no thumb bowler used that 11 pound twist, it would destroy the pattern with carrydown, as no flare. But if your wife has a low rev rate, that won't happy. It would just a be very weak ball.

The other entry level option from Brunswick, rhino at 11 pounds, also has no weight block. Looking over what Brunswick does, they do not put weight blocks in balls 11 pounds of less.

A good website to use is Gebhardtsbowling
Many other websites list the 15 pound specs only, which won't help  you.

To go with entry level options, the After Dark and Boost from 900 Global have a 0.18 differential in 11 pounds. So with a strong drilling will get some track flare.

Some of the ebonite balls still available do have higher diff cores in 11 pounds. Like turbo-r is 0.039. That's flare plenty. The 15 pound turbo-r actually has a lower diff of .035. An example of why you can't assume that lower weight means less core.

2 years ago I taught myself how to bowl no-thumb. I stared with a 11 pound Columbia Scout and then moved up in weight after. Anyway, that ball had no core, no flare and created the worst carrydown.  I just got it for practice, but wouldn't recommend people use a non-flaring ball after that experience.

If in your situation, I would get at least one of the 900 global balls for just a few more dollars. Once the old Ebonite stuff sells out, I think it would harder to find 11 pound balls with 0.039 differential, so maybe get one of those now while you can.

thedjs

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1017
Re: Weight block in 11lb. Twist?
« Reply #3 on: February 20, 2020, 06:51:26 PM »
Thanks all.  I don't know anything about 900 Global but the After Dark looks like it might be just what she needs.  And, if I'm reading their description right, the 11lb. has a weight block like the other weights.