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Author Topic: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans  (Read 12422 times)

dougb

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Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« on: May 16, 2012, 04:00:52 AM »
This article is a good little slice of Faball history.  I never knew the Utah plant manufactured for west of the Mississipi.

http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1991-04-02/news/1991092114_1_dundalk-ball-bowlers

STRIKE! Dundalk plant makes 'the Hammer,' the ball of choice for choosy bowlers Bowlers say unique ball is right down their alley.

April 02, 1991|By Glenn Small | Glenn Small,Evening Sun Staff

Bill Mitchell takes a sky-blue bowling ball out of the rack and places it on a well-worn stand, turning it with his hands, examining it the way a doctor might a newborn baby.

This isn't just any ball, claim many bowlers who use it. It's "the Hammer," thousands of which are made annually by Faball Enterprises of Dundalk.



"If there's one little dink in the ball, I have it sent back to be recut," says Mitchell, who, as a quality control inspector, is among the last people to touch the product as it leaves the assembly line. If a defective ball slips past, he stands to lose three days' work without pay.

Last year, more than 250,000 Hammers, which sell for more than $100 each, were sold to bowlers in the United States and overseas. They are produced largely by two companies -- one in Utah, the other in Dundalk.

At a recent televised Pro Bowlers Association tournament in Long Island, N.Y., each of the top three bowlers was rolling a Dundalk-made Hammer. One of them was Danny Wiseman, himself a Dundalk product.

"It gives you a good feeling, because every time you see it [the ball] on television, you know it came from our plant. We made it," said Mitchell, one of about 50 workers at the Broening Highway plant, across from the General Motors minivan plant.

"I think it's one of the better balls on the market," said John Gaines, 24, a local bowler who uses a Hammer to build a 210 average. "It hooks the most. It has the most curve to it.

"A lot of people like that because, with more hook, it hits the pins harder and you get more pin action."

Although many people in Baltimore apparently don't realize the Hammer is made here -- the executive director of the Dundalk Chamber of Commerce didn't know, for instance -- Gaines, who works at a Glen Burnie pro shop, said most serious bowlers do.

"It's our No. 1-selling bowling ball," said Bob Gudorf, a vice president for Classic Products Corp., a Fort Wayne, Ind., bowling-supply company that sells to some 3,000 pro shops and bowling alleys in five Midwestern states.

Gudorf, whose company sells all the major brands of bowling balls, explained that the Hammer has developed a certain "mystique" since it appeared in the early 1980s.

Back then, the ball was hard to find on the retail market, yet millions of bowlers who watched professional bowling on television saw the ball regularly on telecasts, thanks to a marketing ploy by Dennis Baldwin, the owner of the Faball plant in Dundalk.


Unlike other bowling ball manufacturers, who placed the ball's name and label on the top so that the bowler could see it, Baldwin decided to put his label on the side, where the television camera could pick it up.

As each pro bowler prepared to make a shot, the camera zooming in from the side would pick up the distinctive Hammer label.

"It made so much sense it's unbelievable," said Gudorf, speaking of the marketing ploy. "That's what got Faball started. They forced me to handle their ball. I resisted it at first, but I kept getting hundreds of calls for it. You couldn't get the ball."

Unlike the other four established bowling ball manufacturers in the country, Faball was just starting out in 1983.

Baldwin, 49, a bearded former motorcycle racer and parts supplier, got a call from an old friend, Earl Widman, a former pro bowler from St. Louis. Widman had found an inventor named John Fabinich, of Lorain, Ohio, who was making bowling balls with a unique two-piece design. Widman liked the ball and wanted Baldwin to try it.

Because of its design, the ball had more "hook" and hit the pins harder, Baldwin said.

Widman and another man bought the patent rights from Fabinich, who was molding the balls from polyester in a trailer. The pair sold Baldwin on the idea of manufacturing the balls.

In the back room of a pro shop on Harford Road in Parkville eight years ago, the men began learning how to make bowling balls, using Fabinich's design, but employing a newer material, urethane.

A soft plastic, urethane was just coming into its own as a material for bowling balls, mostly because bowling alleys had stopped using flammable lacquer coatings on their lanes and had begun using a polyurethane coating instead.

It turned out that a ball made of urethane reacted best against lanes coated with urethane, creating more friction, and thus greater power and hook, Baldwin said.

Since those early days, Faball has steadily grown. Baldwin's plant, which was in Highlandtown for years, recently moved into smaller, but more efficient, space on Broening Highway.

Widman and his partner, John Wonders, still own the patent rights and Baldwin is one of two manufacturers licensed to produce the Hammer. The other plant is in Clearfield, Utah, but the two firms work closely together, Baldwin said.

All balls made in Dundalk are sold east of the Mississippi and overseas to Europe. The Utah balls are sold west of the Mississippi and to Asian countries.

Baldwin keeps tight control over who gets in to see the balls being made, fearing the leak of his manufacturing secrets. Two recent visitors to the plant were asked to sign forms promising they would not go into the bowling ball business, before Baldwin would allow a tour.

The process of making the Hammer begins with a mixture of molten clay and plastic poured into molds that will become the weight blocks, or the internal core of the balls.



Each weight block is weighed and marked before being mounted inside steel molds. The molds, which form the balls, are filled with scorching hot liquid urethane.

After the balls are cooled, workers machine them to a smooth finish. Computer-assisted engraving machines give each ball a label and a number. The number is important. It allows Baldwin to track when each ball was made and who was the quality control inspector the day the ball left the plant. If one comes back defective, the inspector gets three days off without pay, he said. That does not happen often, Baldwin said.

The four other major manufacturers -- Ebonite, Brunswick, Columbia and AMF -- have since introduced their own two-piece balls.

According to Gudorf, some of the newer balls made by other companies are coming close to the performance of the Hammer.

"It's going to be a little bit tougher out there for" Baldwin, said Gudorf, who thinks the other companies reacted slowly to the Hammer. "His next challenge is to come up with newer designs."

That, said Baldwin, is in the works.

 

MI 2 AZ

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #1 on: May 16, 2012, 01:46:43 PM »
Thanks for the article.  Even though I bought a Black Hammer around 1984, I did not know much about the company at the time.

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stopncrank

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #2 on: May 16, 2012, 02:07:22 PM »
Cool article, hard to beleive there were only 5 companies back then making bowling balls. Still one of the best balls I ve ever thrown. And how bout John Gaines being mentioned in the article...
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link7298

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #3 on: May 16, 2012, 02:24:11 PM »
Yeah once I saw John mention I had to email him a link to it! LOL!

dougb

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #4 on: May 16, 2012, 03:24:38 PM »
I forwarded this article to Jason Wonders over at Visionary Bowling.  His dad John is mentioned above.  He said it was a fun read but highly inaccurate.  Still interesting to me!

batbowler

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2012, 09:56:33 AM »
The serial number on the Faball Hammer balls had a "B", "S", "U" stamped so you knew if it was from the Baltimore, St. Louis, or Utah plant! I remember getting a huge shipment in our pro shop in the mid 80's, cause we hosted the Indiana state bowling tournament and we had the black hammer for the ball of the tournament! You could tell on the box which plant made the ball and we had them from all over the country! I guess because we got about 200 balls for the tournament they had to ship them from whichever plant they could! I've talked to John Wonders before and when they started the Visionary brand, a lot of the same technology went into their new ball company!
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gsback

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #6 on: December 31, 2012, 07:16:28 AM »
I forwarded this article to Jason Wonders over at Visionary Bowling.  His dad John is mentioned above.  He said it was a fun read but highly inaccurate.  Still interesting to me!

Having talked with Jason many times about Hammer way back when, this doesn't come as a surprise at all!!  Would be real interesting to see a truth be told book from Jason I would think!!
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RadioActive

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Re: Old Baltimore Sun article for the Faball fans
« Reply #7 on: January 08, 2013, 01:41:51 PM »
So which parts are inaccurate?