I'm a cranker naturally, but I can play a stroker or tweener line, and have done so with this ball often. My ball speed is about 16 mph, and I have very little axis tilt, about 25-40 degrees axis turn, once again, varied depending on the line/shot I'm on.
Got this ball used from a friend of mine, and it may have had 50 games on it. I did a full plug and redrill on the ball, so now I'm tracking in an entirely fresh area of the ball, with the pin about 1/2 inch above the bridge, CG kicked out at a 50 degree angle from the center of grip line, and a small weight hole up the VAL. With a slight polish, this ball does exactly what I expected.
The ball was drilled to be long and skid flip, so that I can throw it in lengthy tournaments when the heads and mids get burnt. It works. Slow it down a little and move inside, the ball flies through the oil, gets to the backend, and reads...hard! The ball, when it's left in the oil, doesn't flip, but actually reads like a particle, as long as you throw it slow enough. When you play up the drier boards with this ball, it does exactly what I drilled it to do. It skids, picks up revolutions at about 45 feet, and makes a left hand turn downlane, although it's completely controllable.
The best feature of this ball: it hits like a truck!! Of course, the ball is tracking on fresh coverstock, so it will hit a little harder than anything else, but this ball is absolutely amazing. It will most likely be replacing my Radical Inferno, which has a tendency to squirt/jump when it hits a dry spot or a puddle.
If you can get your hands on this ball (even though discontinued for a year or two now) I would look into it. It has the same weight block as the Ebonite Clash, but as far as I can tell, doesn't have the over/under reaction associated with the coverstock.
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For a game based on the principles of science and math, bowling sure does have a bad habit of being illogical.