Thanks to all who have clarified what you mean.
Quote : "To Aloarjr810's post I would add that any flare that occurs before the ball hits the lane is obviously not going to create track on the ball. So the PAP at release isn't the PAP that the lane actually sees. - JohnP"
I understand what you are saying, but if it doesn't show up on the ball, how do you measure it?
COMMENTARY: I think we get caught up in the "science" of it all way too much. When you talk about flare before the ball even hits the lane it would be useful if we were
robots that repeat shots perfectly. Since we aren't then the more useful stuff is the things that are more easily measured. Frankly, most bowlers can't "split boards" as accurately as they think, let alone exactly repeat speed, rev rate, tilt, etc.
A PAP measurement should be thought of as an "average" release for Bowler A versus an exact thing that happens regardless of bowler error, etc. It should be used by the pro shop for layout purposes, just as surface changes and release change recommendations to enhance the bowler's chances. I don't exclude myself when I talk about "most" bowlers. Pinpoint accuracy is not my specialty.