This is possibly obvious, and I "think" I already know the answer, but let me throw it out for discussion and feedback anyway, just in case I'm wrong.
I decided to test Mirlon Total as a replacement for Abralon and Sia (I like Mirlon Total so far, by the way). I took a new 1500 pad, cut it in half, and used it to sand a Pyramid Curse, 4 sides on a spinner. I then took a 2500 pad and used it to sand an Optimus solid 4 sides on a spinner. As a control ball, I also brought my Hammer Scandal which was lane shined to about 10 games. Off to the lanes we go.
First I threw the control ball, which only moved maybe three or four boards, which is about right for this house and the Scandal since it is so early and so shined. For me, that's about right. Next I took the Optimus sanded at 2500. Effectively... dead straight, maybe 3-4 boards on a good day downhill with a tailwind. I didn't expect that, so I pulled out the Curse freshly sanded 4 sides @ 1500. Dead straight, maybe 4-5 boards. I didn't expect that either.
Totally frustrated at this point and wondering if I was in a parallel universe, I took the other half of the 1500 pad that I brought with me and lightly sanded the Optimus by hand for a few seconds. Total hook city, anything I wanted from anywhere I want. That's interesting. The only difference was by hand vs spinner, and spinner is better, right? I repeated the experiment with the Pyramid Curse, which promptly out hooked the Optimus.
There are only 2 conclusions that could be drawn from this scenario. Number one, never use Mirlon on a spinner. I know it's not made to be used on the spinner, but it shouldn't have caused this issue. Number two, I keep hearing people talk about the difference in pressure applied during sanding. I was really being firm on the spinner, and very light by hand. Personally I think that the answer is I used too much force while sanding.
Thoughts?