Time Zone with a pin over bridge drill (CG a bit to the right) will give you recovery from anywhere - almost too much recovery with a length drillling and polished cover, and the cover can be tweaked for the oil volume. I've thrown mine at 600 dull, hi-gloss polished, and in between. My Blazing Inferno will not backend like the Time Zone. Very different balls. They can be close in boards covered, but the Time Zone is more versatile. I have a second Time Zone that's drilled weak:
http://www.pipeline.com/~randyo/arsenal/15timezone2.jpg, and this ball covers a lot less ground than the first Time Zone. It's closer to my Monster Red/Black
http://www.pipeline.com/~randyo/arsenal/15mrb.jpg in boards covered, but will handle slightly more oil due to the stronger cover. I suppose what I'm trying to emphasize is that the Time Zone is so versatile that it can be just about any ball you want it to be. Think about it - it's solid Powerkoil 18 - it will hook in oil when dulled - it will skid/snap big time when highly polished - and the core is very very versatile. Don't be afraid of the assymetrical core - it just adds to the drilling possibilities. Just follow the instructions. Place the pin for the desired length and flare, tweak the breakpoint with the PSA (mass bias) - and DON'T put the PSA on the negative side of the ball. If you find that Brunswicks assymetrical drill sheets are too limited, go look at the Storm site, or any other ball-maker that sells mass-bias balls. The concept is the same whether you call it a RAD, or HOT, or Bomb, or PSA.