Can't find any information on if the Cuda/C 2000 had TEC in it, but glass particles are tough to maintain too. No sandpaper, lots of water and scotch Brite or abralon. Tec death is a real thing.
No, the Cuda/C 2000 was not a TEC particle ball per se. It and its Track twin, the Heat 2 Pearl, had a very special particle added ONLY to the surface of its coverstock. I had the Heat 2 Pearl and loved it.
And here is the problem with it: once it was sanded, the particles all but disappeared as if they were never there. The ball became a "plain" resin with nowhere near the same ability it had before it was sanded. I was not the only one who encountered this resurfacing problem.
The balls with the TEC particles also had special problems with re-surfacing but nothing that couldn't be overcome. They were very soft; so they couldn't be sanded with sandpaper or with Abralon pads. They needed a very light pressure with Scotch-Brite pads; so as not to sand the particle smooth. One method, pioneered by Ebonite, was to polish the ball and then apply the final desired grit with the Scotch-Brite pad over the polished ball.
FYI
Maroon Scotch-Brite (7447) uses 360 grit CAMI grade abrasive or 360 grit FEPA (Abralon grade)
Green Scotch-Brite (6448) uses 600 grit CAMI grade abrasive or 1200 grit FEPA (Abralon grade)
Light Grey Scotch-Brite (7448) uses 800 grit CAMI grade or 1600 grit FEPA.
Gold Scotch-Brite (7745) uses 1200 grit CAMI or 2400 grit FEPA.
The White Scotch-Brite pad (7445) uses talc [talcum powder] as the abrasive; it will not affect the surface of a bowling ball. So, forget it.