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Author Topic: CGs/MB back towards the grip center. Whatever happened to those old label drill  (Read 20663 times)

LuckyLefty

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We all know, cg or mass bias out usually creates more midlane.  CG or MB stacked creates less.  Cg back towards thegrip center(correction) or  MB or under the thumb or in the track seems to create what used to be called lope or wait before the ball made it's move!

What is the relavance of this not as often used drilling in today's game?  Especially for bowlers with plenty of side roll.  Lope is a part of their roll already.

I am bowling in a center where drillings that create midlane just force me very deep.  I have 60 to 70 degree side roll, can cg back towards the grip center or MB under the Thumb work for me.  Traditionally they haven't but I think that certain conditions make it more likely it would work for me. 

Drilling gurus?

REgards,

Luckylefty
« Last Edit: September 23, 2012, 10:09:05 AM by LuckyLefty »
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

 

kidlost2000

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In all of the layouts they give no exact CG to PAP placements. They give areas between the center grip line and out towards the VAL to move the CG so you can add a weight hole for a desired reaction. It is the weight hole not the cg location that cause the desired reactions.

In every layout you can leave the cg on your center grip line and place the weight hole where listed. You will not be able to drill as big of a weight hole as deep as preferred to effect the bowling balls internal diff. As mentioned before, its the weight hole not the CG that makes the difference. Now the CG is relevant to help drill the weight hole in the desired location and size to make it worth while.
…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

LuckyLefty

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My point is that in the 900 global sheet 2 of the cg positions 4 and 5 inches can be drilled with no weighthole and the drill sheet indicates that one can expect different reactions.

Possible?  My tests say yes..

Regards,

Luckylefty
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

kidlost2000

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Your point varies and I can only go off of what your reading from a drill sheet I can't see. Your point about the Ebonite article isn't correct because what your saying they state in the article about the specific CG to PAP distances isn't true. They give suggested areas to locate the cg to add a weight hole to a specific area and then change the reaction of the ball. None have the pin in the same location and only move the CG with no weight hole to change the balls reaction.

Now I can only assume that what your reading in the Bounty drill sheet that is different from the one Global post on their website is true.

So on the Bounty drill sheet the pin to PAP is identical and only the cg is moved 1" and is suppose to have different reactions with the cg being at either 4" or a different reaction at 5" ?

The reason I find that hard to believe is because I don't have the mentioned drill sheet and because there is no way to determine the exact top weight of the ball to be specific when making that suggestion.

Example being,

One ball has a 3" pin and 2 ozs of topweight
one ball has a 3" pin and 4 ozs of topweight

Both balls when drilled identical and the cg is say 4" from your pap will have two very different side weights at that time prior to adding a weight hole.

Lets say you have the same two above bowling balls and both have the exact same layouts and the lighter topweight ball has the CG 4" from the pap and the heavier topweight ball has the CG 5" from your pap, because of the difference in top weight and location, they can have the exact same side weight on the ball with the exact same pin to pap location and two different CG to PAP locations. Are you saying the will react different because the CGs are different distances from the PAP even though the side weight will be the same?

Shifting the CG and leaving the top of the core/pin in the exact same location, doesn't move/shift the core on a symmetric ball. It is only shifting excess weight that can allow for larger weight holes, which then change the core shape and effect the balls reaction.

When you watch this vid you can see two balls drilled the same with two different cg locations and two very different side weights. You also see after that demonstration the inner core of the balls and what happens to the core as the cg is moved around the cores axis/Pin.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8vX_yoM0Q4

…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

Impending Doom

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Lucky,

I think what you might be seeing is the "CG Zone" or some such thing. So if you don't have a ball with a big cg out of line with the mb, then the cg will be in this area. I guess 900 needed to verse people that can't understand mass bias? I don't know.

But take a look at this video.
http://youtu.be/UKLrdm6PtK8

You look at Tony's layout, it has the cg almost in his track, but the MB right of the centerline. Out of line CG doesn't mean much there.

LuckyLefty

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I've thought a bit about this post and done a little work on a couple of balls(symmetric).

Before I post a little on my results.....

I was wondering if anyone knew back with the Throwbot testing referenced above,,
What is the axis rotation that the throwbot was using in the video posted by Impending Doom?

Regards,

Luckylefty
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

Impending Doom

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Lucky,

http://www.tonyruocco.com/

Could always shoot him an email and ask him.

scotts33

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To me it all depends where your PSA winds up whether it's symmetrical cores or asymmetrical cores.  You use x holes on the gradient line to tweak desired ball reaction.  The issue being most pro shops do not have a Determinator so where the PSA winds up is up for question.  Note on the RG Shout that I am posting where the PSA is with no x hole and where the CG is and most would think the PSA would be in the thumb hole but it is not.  The actual drilling angle PAP to pin to PSA on this ball is 105*x 4.25"x 65*.  Ball is a solid nice length because of it's 1500 polished OOB and heavy arc on backend without a lot of over reaction.  My PAP is 5" over and 0.

Scott

LuckyLefty

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I have made a couple of mistakes in my posts in this thread that may have gotten the discussion off track.

Mistake in #1 is that in that the original post I note the cg back towards the MB.  I meant back towards the GRIP Center for a symmetric ball or with the MB of an Assymetric ball under the thumb or back on the track.  Now corrected.

Mistake #2 is I referenced Impending Doom's reference to a video when I meant to reference Kldlost posting of the Brunswick video showing different CGs and throwbot throwing.

So given that here are my questions and comments so far and continuing.

1.  Does anyone know what axis rotation throwbot was set at to do the above different cg position videos?

2.  Scott above with the lines on his ball is illustrating basically the drilling I am talking about.  What used to be called 1:30(imagine the cg right on the grip center or very close.)  This on a symmetrical ball.  Or a this video drilling #4.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iR3eKsm8LKY.

Now again I am a 60 or 70 degree axis rotation bowler and have done some testing of these different positions on my oiled to 35 foot shot, that supposedly is a 40 foot shot!  Yeah right!

Regards,

Luckylefty
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

scotts33

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LL--I would say that because you have a reasonable amount of axis rotation you struggle from the left side in that you maybe the only one on that side of the lane and get very little head break down as well as carry down.  Hence your side of the lane can be either a boon if you are a lower axis rotation player or a bane when you are higher.

I'd say you need to learn to lessen your axis rotation to calm the ball down off the spot.  I assume you are speaking more of house type conditions that have less side to side amount of blend and have a lot of friction to the outside.  Use a forward roll type of release to calm the ball down off the spot and maintain speed.

What I have learned in these situations (see my stats in profile) is that I use weaker balls like the Shout with weaker layouts like the one above or 1:30 drills as you suggest on the fresh house type condition as they break down I can move to something stronger.  1:30 layouts for me are good from the outside but not as good on carry from the inside.  With the Shout above I generally use a line of something like slide 23 with12 at arrows to 7-8 at break point and early on try to cut down on axis rotation with more forward roll.  As I move in and play increases I go to more axis rotation/side roll or a stronger ball (QZ-1 Red/Frantic pin up) if my carry suffers.  I can use the Shout OOB 1500 polished without the over reaction because of layout and 2.57 .022.  I am also bowling house shots on 1st Gen. Bruns Anvilane and have that for me with the 16 yr. old Anvilane though the surface is very hard the panels are very worn and polished equipment is a must anything with some surface tends to bleed energy quickly and hits poorly.  Low Rg balls for me on this condition and lane surface also tend to bleed energy.   

My reality is that most decent players with a decent hand and medium speed can use any lower cost entry level ball like a RG Shout or Motiv Ascent Solid and do well with them and save money on ball cost.  Generally most bowlers are using medium to high end pieces when they do not need to on house shots.  Only folks that need high end equipment on house shots are the high speed rev challenged bowler.
Scott

StickZ

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So with cg placement meaning little. You could ultimately drill a ball upside down with the cg above the fingers as long as static weights were legal, you would get the same.reaction as if the cg was rotated 180 degrees from that?

Rightycomplex

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So with cg placement meaning little. You could ultimately drill a ball upside down with the cg above the fingers as long as static weights were legal, you would get the same.reaction as if the cg was rotated 180 degrees from that?

Yes, for symmetrics and depending on the weight hole. Pin placement is the key for symmetrics.
James C. Jones
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LuckyLefty

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I am adding a link here that Scott33 sent me.

http://www.blueprintbowling.com/Blog/Posts/blueprint-testing-by-earl-and-supercats.aspx

This link does speak to the subject of different drillings but it does speak to the subject of how much a 60 to 70 degree axis rotation player adds to ball movement!!
Also the concept of effective rev rate based on axis tilt is interesting also.

The above concept of how much more movement one gets with a lot of side roll versus a small amount of side roll is quite dramatic.  Thsi is why I ask my question about throwbot and it's axis rotation for the cgnomadeh test referenced above.

I have recently done a bit of testing with some drillings that are symmetrics to verify some of my ideas.

Please anyone involved in the Brunswick tests above...axis rotation used?

Regards,

Luckylefty
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

StickZ

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so what happens with a pin in ball or a 1in pin and cg distance?? i have a total nv with that and was wondering if cg placement has any effect on the ball other than being legal? or if i can put cg anywhere and just use the mass bias for ballreaction??

kidlost2000

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The EBI info does show some interesting things. Still the cg is merely weight displaced in the ball to keep it legal when drilling. If your going to test the theory yourself because you believe your axis tilt will make the ball move more if the cg is on the center grip line or towards the positive side of the ball it is simple to do.

Buy and drill two of the same symmetric bowling balls. Put the pin in the exact same location and then have one with the cg in and one with it out. Then go and start bowling. See if your results vary.

« Last Edit: September 29, 2012, 10:35:54 AM by kidlost2000 »
…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

Rightycomplex

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Stickz,

With a pin in ball i would recommend that pin and cg in the palm to provide normally depths of drilling or mark the PSA 6.75" from the pin, put the PSA beside the thumb and keep the pin about a half inch from the ring and bury the fingers while drilling and that way there's a possibility of adding a flare increasing hole later. But, same rules apply. It limits what you can do to a ball without doing something stupid like pin up and having to bury the fingers add/or P1, you can do it but its just easier to do the two above layouts. When i layout a ball, im trying to optimize the ball to their stats. If i know their stats arent going to match up with a pin in then i drill another pin distanced ball.
As far as the total nv goes, will have the same affect as above. CG on any ball will only have an affect on statics and weight hole placement. When you move too much of the weight away from 1 quadrant you will be require to have a weight hole.
James C. Jones
Orbdrillers Pro Shop Holiday Bowl
Chester, Va.

Hammer Regional/Amateur Staff Member

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