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Author Topic: True of False  (Read 2336 times)

recognize_talent

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True of False
« on: May 29, 2005, 09:02:39 PM »
about a week ago i got word that bruns was pouring covers for lane masters/legends like the do for morich and lane 1, so my three questions are this and if you have an answer to them please let me know.

1. is it true
2. if true did they pour the cover for the l m's garunteed
3. if so then is it the same particle used on the goliath
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"Strikes show them you know the game. Spares show them you can play the game."

When you bowl a 300, then you have a little sense of what it is like to be Jesus Christ.

A wise man knows when he is beat, it's time you RECOGNIZE Talent!!!

 

DanR

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Re: True of False
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2005, 05:06:42 AM »
I always thought Lane Master had their own factory and purchased cores from other and poured the balls themselves.  I havn't heard anything of the sort myself, hope others have information on this.

charlest

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Re: True of False
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2005, 07:39:35 AM »
I cannot confirm any changes in Legends/Lanemasters procedures, but I sincerely doubt it. They buy their resins from Europe and use industrial diamonds for their particles.
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Just like hand grenades and horse shoes, in bowling you only have to get close ...

CharlesT
"None are so blind as those who will not see."

BowlerKidR

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Re: True of False
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2005, 09:43:54 AM »
i dont think that they do. The reason is that LaneMasters/Legends used all top quality particle resins in their balls, where all the other companies (Brunswick, hammer, storm, roto grip, ebonite) all use cleaper particle and resins in their balls. I think that they have their own factory where they do this.
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"Strike for show, spare for dough"
I LIKE TO BOWL
Im A Hammer Head 100%

charlest

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Re: True of False
« Reply #4 on: May 30, 2005, 10:04:16 AM »
quote:
i dont think that they do. The reason is that LaneMasters/Legends used all top quality particle resins in their balls, where all the other companies (Brunswick, hammer, storm, roto grip, ebonite) all use cleaper particle and resins in their balls. I think that they have their own factory where they do this.
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"Strike for show, spare for dough"
I LIKE TO BOWL
Im A Hammer Head 100%


I wouldn't go that far. Lanemasters told me they purchase "premium" resins and I know they use that resin all the way from the core to the surface. As they say, "It's not what ya got, but how you use it."
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Just like hand grenades and horse shoes, in bowling you only have to get close ...

CharlesT
"None are so blind as those who will not see."

a_ak57

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Re: True of False
« Reply #5 on: May 30, 2005, 10:10:55 AM »
Like others have said, I don't think so.  It doesn't seem likely considering they use different resins, and as charles said, have resin from the core to the surface, different than the other companies' method.
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- Andy


Brunswick...........'nuff said.

recognize_talent

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Re: True of False
« Reply #6 on: May 31, 2005, 02:30:34 AM »
bayer? like the asprin bayer?
--------------------
"Strikes show them you know the game. Spares show them you can play the game."

When you bowl a 300, then you have a little sense of what it is like to be Jesus Christ.

A wise man knows when he is beat, it's time you RECOGNIZE Talent!!!

RandyO

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Re: True of False
« Reply #7 on: May 31, 2005, 02:51:59 AM »
Yep - welcome to the real World - BAYER Chemical & Pharmaecutical - one of the finest makers of chemicals in the entire universe. Every time you throw a "modern" strike, give thanks to "Otto".
 
Otto Bayer, who was not related to the family that founded the Bayer Group, was born in Frankfurt am Main on November 4, 1902. There he began his study of chemistry, which he concluded in 1924 with a doctorate. His tutor was the famous chemist Julius von Braun, who arranged his first job in an industrial facility - at the Cassella Farbwerke of I.G. Farbenindustrie - following Bayer's two-year period as a research assistant.  
 
After Bayer had registered his first research achievements in the field of vat and sulfur dyes and in the lightfastness of dyestuffs, he was unexpectedly appointed to the management of the department in 1931. This was followed only two years later by another surprising career move of major significance: he was transferred to Bayer in Leverkusen, where he became head of the Central Scientific Laboratory. Although Otto Bayer was only 32 years old at the time and the youngest member of the team, he soon succeeded in making a name for himself.
 
 
In Leverkusen he was exposed to completely new fields of research, such as rubber chemistry, pharmaceutical research and crop protection. Otto Bayer's greatest achievement was ultimately the invention of polyurethane chemistry. The principle of polyaddition using diisocyanates is based on his research, yet at first, his closest colleagues were very skeptical. Although the production of macromolecular structures was already a line of research that held promise for the future, Otto Bayer's basic idea of mixing small volumes of chemical substances together to obtain dry foam materials was seen as unrealistic. But after numerous technical difficulties, Bayer eventually succeeded in synthesizing polyurethane foam. It was to take 10 more years of development work before customized materials could be manufactured on the basis of his invention.
 
Otto Bayer influenced the development of this versatile family of plastics for many years until his death at the age of nearly 80. Thanks to the chemical and entrepreneurial achievements of the inventor of polyurethanes, the Bayer Group still holds a large share of the world market for these materials.


Edited on 5/31/2005 2:44 AM