I am having trouble with my equipment. I am a tweener and my eye is an angular movement to the pocket. I have a new ball drilled but didn't specify the pin placement (which is 2") and I now have a ball that is skid-flip. This leads me to a question. Should the pin placement reflect the bowling personality? I think that the 2" pin placement would be more for someone that plays the lanes more straight up, tweeners need more, in my case 3.5 to 4" and the crankers, something more, I guess. All I know is that the 2" placement is not working for me (skid/flip). There is another bowler that has the same ball I do with a 4" pin and hers moves fine (angular). I was told to dull up the ball, but I want to have the ball set up correctly so that I don't have to keep adjusting the coverstock for the lane conditions. I understand that a I will always need to play the lanes but I want to play within my skillset (angular, not skid/filp). Tell me what you think.
Also, what do you mean by 'angular'?
Do you mean a more gradual smooth hook? Some people use a hockey stick shape to describe the skid/snap motion and then use the banana shape to describe the smoother curve motion.
I think you are saying you want an earlier hook so if you look at the picture in my earlier post, you will see where the pin to PAP should be for that if your ball is sym. Not sure about Asyms so someone else will have to comment on that.
Using a lower grit number abrasive will help the ball to start hooking earlier. Higher number grit or polish will delay the hook. How you play the lane condition will affect the ball's motion too.
Your being lower track and more tilt will probably cause the ball to skid more before hooking. I am the same but I have slow speed to compensate for that. When I increase speed, my ball hooks much later (sometimes too late). If I could play with more speed, I would have to have lower grit surfaces on the ball.