win a ball from Bowling.com

Author Topic: Violent Eruption  (Read 17723 times)

Ballreviews

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 543
Violent Eruption
« on: May 24, 2012, 10:27:16 AM »
Ball NPS Score: 100.00
bowling.com has the largest selection of bowling balls
Click here to shop.


FEATURES:
- Color: Lava All colors do vary somewhat from the picture shown.
- Core: Resurgence Symmetric
- Veneer: New Era Skid Flip Plus
- Surface: 800 Abranet, 1000, 2000 Abralon, Powerhouse Factory Finish Polish
- A few tiny pit holes in the cover stock of the ball are normal
- RG: 2.46
- Diff: .040
- Recommended Lane Condition: Medium-Medium Dry Oil
- Description:
New Era SF Plus - New Era reactive coverstock has been a proven winner in the Columbia 300 line for a number of very successful releases. The Skid Flip version of New Era was used in the original Eruption with great success. To follow up the great Eruption, we’re introducing New Era SF Plus, which will produce the same ease through the heads and even more back end pop!
Resurgence Core - It doesn’t always have to take reinventing the wheel in order to produce a great bowling ball. The Resurgence core will go down in Columbia 300’s great history as one of the most successful cores we’ve produced. The low RG and Medium Differential makes this a great choice for all styles.
What To Expect - The Violent Eruption is clean through the front and provides the greatest length in the Columbia 300 lineup. The sharp move it makes off the friction along with it’s length makes this ball a great choice on most medium to medium dry lane condtions.

 

EddieG

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 13
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #1 on: May 26, 2012, 08:02:51 AM »
If you loved the original Eruption, your going to love this Violent Eruption. Very clean through the front part of the lane, with about 3-5 boards more backend reaction. This ball is going to be great on medium-dry lane conditions (also on old wood).
 This ball will be released in June.
 Eddie Grace
Columbia 300 Ambassador.

tvostry

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 4
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #2 on: June 09, 2012, 09:07:25 PM »
Violent Eruption

The first word that comes to mind is WOW!!! By far my favorite of all the new releases I have thrown, as you can imagine with how much I loved the Outburst (I only have 9!) and the Eruption. It has the same beloved Resurgence core that has been proven throughout the past few years, with the New Era SF Plus coverstock, which is newly engineered to give the ball more length with a ton of pop at the back.

I’ve really experimented with surfaces with this ball, simply because there is so much pop at the back along with the added length. Columbia has never given us a ball with more pop and length. It’s like the coverstock is on steroids! I have my first one drilled 80 x 4 7/8 x 40, a traditional layout for me to get the ball down the lane and snap hard. Compared to a similarly drilled original Eruption (85 x 5 3/8 x 40), both are very clean. Where the difference comes in is at the back of the lane, as the Violent travels a few extra feet, but is about 4 or 5 boards stronger overall because of the strong move to the pins. This is a ball I will use on lower to medium volume house shots as well as when the lanes begin to break down and open up on a medium or long sport pattern. This ball will give you lots of area to hit the pocket and carry when the lanes give it to you. On fresher sport conditions, this ball may not be the best choice because of the added angle to the pins. A more controllable motion like an original Eruption, or something with surface like a new Wicked Encounter would be more suitable to the fresher, flatter pattern. However, this ball has matched up every time I have gone to it.

As for the surface question, I have decided to keep mine at 1000 with some shine on top of it. I will definitely be getting a lot of these Violent Eruptions in the near future because it simply strikes a ton. My next layout for this ball will be close to 65 x 4 5/8 x 70 to help the ball start up earlier and control the pattern a little more. The first one is violently angular, and the next one will complement it! Pick up your Violent Eruption on June 21, 2012, and see why some Columbia 300 Ambassadors are already calling this the ball of the year!

A quick note for those of you bowling Junior Gold this year: Two years ago in Indianapolis, the long pattern played very soft with a ton of high scores using balls that were angular. The medium pattern was a little tougher, but still required a ball to get down the lane with a strong move to the pocket. The same could be said for the semifinal and final patterns. I used that mindset to finish in 11th that year. I saw these same reactions do well the year before in Indy as well, where I was still young with equipment that didn’t match up and finished in the top 50 or so. All of the houses in Indy, in my opinion, are extremely high friction especially in the front part of the lane, requiring balls with length. Put that information together with the ball I used for 40 out of the 46 games in Vegas, the Outburst, on the way to a 9th place finish and a Junior Team USA selection. With the same core as the Outburst, and the new cover to give you some added length, this will be a perfect fit in your bag for just about every pattern other than short. Look for a review on the Classic U2 soon to help you on short!

Tyler Vostry
Junior Team USA 2012
Columbia 300 Ambassador

ronaldhjr

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 165
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #3 on: July 13, 2012, 10:45:09 AM »
PAP: 4 11/16 3/4 down
Speed: 17-19.5
Style: Stroker


I have this ball drilled pin under the bridge and cg swung out to the right weight hole on the mid line.  3 inch pin 2.5oz top weight out of box.

I have rolled with the Violent on THS and Kegel Route 66 pattern.

On the THS out of box the ball was going a tad too long for me, I would get the ball through the fronts without a problem skidding through the break point was the issue.  I like to play around with surface.  I hit the ball with 500 wet sanded 10 seconds (two sides) very light pressure.

With the surface on the bowling ball I was able to get the ball through the heads consistently and it didn’t lose the energy I thought it would, I was able to use the ball all three games making eye and foot adjustments but very minimal about 3 boards total with my feet and one with my eyes.  Their  were a couple times when I got the ball to far right it came back so needless to say this ball is very versatile my games were 192, 243, 280.  This was the THS

On the Kegel Route 66 pattern I started out using the Nexxus solid to break the lanes down just a little bit after two games I picked the Violent up and stood in the same place moved my eyes in one board, I was amazed with how the ball made it through the fronts so clean and still retained the energy to finish through the pins.  My last two games were 222, 223.

All in all very good ball anytime I can change the cover on the ball and it doesn’t forget how to roll and finish I am very happy with the purchase.  The ball isn’t to strong and it’s not too mild.
Track Amateur Staff

elvismat

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 117
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #4 on: September 15, 2012, 01:50:28 PM »
I picked this up last week, it is drilled pin above ring, 60/40/30 (i think) with a small weight hole.  The VE gives you nice length, with a strong move to the pocket.  I'm a stroker, not a cranker, this ball makes me look like I have a lot of hand.  For me, this ball will be good for medium conditions, where I can play up the boards or when the lanes begin to burn out.  The entry angle is very good, the pin mix is great, with a lot of movement.   So far, I'm averaging 225, with a lot of 9's and X's, carry percentage is high.  I have not had a Columbia for sometime, the VE seems to be something special.....
« Last Edit: September 15, 2012, 01:53:42 PM by elvismat »

Josh C

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 6
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #5 on: October 17, 2012, 02:43:20 PM »
This ball is definitely a homerun! I have lost some of my speed from surgery and am loving this ball. Used it on THS and some Kegel patterns. When the front of the lane went away for my Oath, I grabbed this and struck a lot. It is very clean! If you have slightly higher speed then surface adjustments will be required. This is a must in everyone's bag!
Josh Chambliss
Columbia 300 Ambassador

Kenny Powers

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 15
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #6 on: December 30, 2012, 12:31:05 AM »
LANE CONDITION

Everything.


COMMENTS

Likes: Rarely do I say a ball is this awesome.

Dislikes: I dislike it when I have to put the ball away. It's rare.

Usually the first and only ball in and out of my bag in most conditions. I love low-rg stuff. When it's matched with a pretty clean pearl shell, I like it too. Ball is drilled pin 5 1/4" from axis, into the ring finger. CG is stacked below it. My preferred surface preparation is 500/800/1000/rubbing compound.

The ball just responds to my game nicely. It's low rg so I don't have to put my whole paw into it, and it doesn't go crazy sideways, which means I still have to rev it up a bit. It's the ball that isn't magical in a sense that it's big hooking ball in a box. It just matches up to my game. I can't speak for anybody else, but I can speak for myself and how it works for me.

I would like to drill a few more of these with both stronger and weaker pin positions and shell preps so I can just use VE's on everything, but obviously, as a bowler, that can get boring, so I haven't gotten the nerve to do it just yet... but maybe for USBC Open, I just might do it.

jbungard

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 200
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #7 on: January 27, 2013, 07:27:45 PM »
Columbia 300 Violent Eruption

Excellent performance at a mid-range price

Box: 15 lbs 4 oz with 3.25 oz top weight, 3 5/8” pin to CG. 800/1000/2000/Powerhouse Factory Finish Surface

Drilled 70  x 3.325” x 50 (70 x 45 x 50: essentially stacked leverage) with an extra hole 2” down the Vertical Axis Line from the Grip Midline

Columbia’s Resurgence core returns with their most aggressive and versatile coverstock to date. My Violent Eruption (VE) was drilled over six months ago and has almost 100 competition games on it plus another 80 or so practice/surface adjustment games. Columbia’s advertising covers the details of the core, coverstock and intended use. The VE’s description on this site and Columbia’s Violent Eruption page state the features and expectations: No need for me to duplicate what’s been documented already, particularly when everything Columbia claims regarding the VE is accurate. Instead, I’ll cover my experiences with the VE.

I am a 210 to 220 average bowler on house conditions; mid-190’s on sport patterns. My overall average, THS and sport is 210. I’m a higher tilt, slightly speed dominate player: 19 degrees of tilt, 45 to 70 degrees of rotation, 285 to 330 rpm, 18 mph at release (15.5 to 16 mph down lane). I prefer to play outside of the track area but play the track and inside the track when conditions dictate.

I decided to purchase a VE based on past experience with Resurgence core balls and the extremely high performance marks assigned to the VE by two of the major bowling publications. I didn’t have stacked leverage ball in my bag and, given the standard layout for tweeners (power strokers) in one of the publications is essentially stacked leverage, decided to lay out my VE in a similar manner to see what the buzz and high ratings/praise of the VE were about. First impressions: With the factory polished surface, the VE exhibited more length than I was expecting on a moderate volume of conditioner and a well-used (mature topography) AMF HPL lane surface. Back end reaction was as expected: A strong move as the VE transitioned from skid to hook and good continuation through the second transition (hook to roll). The shot shape is similar to other low RG, medium differential RG symmetric cores: Good continuous hook, not the skid/flip reaction more commonly associated with higher radius of gyration cores, excellent pin carry and minor release variation forgiveness.

The factory surface works well on wood, Guardian and AMF HPL/SPL lane surfaces. For the harder synthetic surfaces: Anvilane, Pro Anvilane, Pathfinder, etc. I found Valentino’s Resurrection over 500-grit, Resurrection over 1000-grit, Rough Buff over 1000-grit, and 2000-grit followed by 3000-grit Abralon to match up better for medium volume and length patterns. The factory surface has a tendency to squirt on higher volume, longer length patterns and/or moderate to high carrydown: Especially on the harder synthetic surfaces.

For me, the VE is a first ball out of the bag on HPL/SPL/wood typical house shots. I have better looks with stronger cores and/or cover stocks on harder synthetic surfaces. Like other low RG core, pearl coverstock combinations, for a right-hander, the VE scores best when the ball is fed to friction to the right. I had decent looks on longer sport patterns using 1000/3000 skip grit surfaces and 1000/4000 skip grit surfaces on shorter or lower volume sport patterns. The factory polished surfaces are better utilized on USBC white and red/THS patterns with defined friction available to the right.

Note that the 15 and 16 pound versions of the VE feature low RG, medium differential RG cores. For those using lighter weights, the 14 pound version is moderately low RG, medium differential while the 13 pound version’s medium RG, high differential RG, results in a shot shape that can differ markedly from the 14-16 pound VEs.

With my VE approaching 200 games, I rate both the coverstock durability and longevity of reaction as “good.”

Pin to positive axis point distances of 3” to 4.5” seem to work best for many bowlers, supporting a core angle that facilitates a good tipping reaction at the hook to roll transition (though the 4.5” to 5.5” pins also seem to work well for the higher rev players).

Based on my experience with the VE as well as others I’ve seen in use, the Violent Eruption is an excellent choice for a bowler looking for good house shot performance at a reasonable price.

For more competitive bowlers including those who frequently bowl tournaments on more challenging conditions, the VE is an excellent choice to fill your need for a versatile medium-low to medium volume pattern ball, a great core and a versatile coverstock that adapts well to surface changes. The VE has been a good-carrying and scoring part of my arsenal for over six months and will remain in the league and tournament bag for the foreseeable future. Well done Bugsy Kelly, Ronald Hickland and all of the professionals at EBI-Columbia 300!
« Last Edit: January 27, 2013, 07:30:34 PM by jbungard »

TWOHAND834

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4350
Re: Violent Eruption
« Reply #8 on: March 10, 2013, 04:49:30 PM »
LANE CONDITION

Length: 40 feet

Volume: Medium

Type (THS, Sport Pattern etc): THS


COMMENTS

I drilled this ball 55 x 5 x 50 with a small weight hole in P3 and my axis point is 5 1/2 x 1/2 up.  My ball speed is 18 at release and a rev rate over 500.  What struck me most about this ball, was even for a ball with a pretty low rg, the ball got through the front part of the lane very clean and had alot of length down lane.  At out of box finish (2000 and Factory Finish), the ball was squirty on the backend.  I took the ball to the shop and hit it with fresh 2000 to get the factory polish off and hit it with some Rough Buff and the difference was noticable.  The ball seemed to read the mids better and made a strong move on the backend, though it was not a flippy reaction.  The Violent Eruption is a true medium condition ball.  If you are looking for a ball that gets through the front part of the lane very well and makes a hard arc on the backend, this is great ball to have in your bag.

Likes: Clean through the front part of the lane and yet still pretty controllable on the backend for a shiny pearl due to the lower rg core.  I am able to carry from anywhere on the lane whether playing near the track or playing deeper inside and really opening up the lane.

Dislikes:  Only dislike is that out of the box, the ball struggles to read the lane and gets a little squirty at the hint of carrydown or on a longer pattern.


PICTURES AND/OR VIDEOS
Steven Vance
Former Pro Shop Operator
Former Classic Products Assistant Manager