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Author Topic: Longevity of a ball  (Read 1255 times)

keeones23

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Longevity of a ball
« on: January 17, 2007, 12:59:25 PM »
My question is How low long or how many games should you be able to put on a ball before it looses it pop and you could say you were satisfied and got your monies worth out of it?
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chitown

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Re: Longevity of a ball
« Reply #1 on: January 18, 2007, 07:28:01 AM »
I guess tis all depends on the bowler.  A bowling ball can last a lot of games if taking care of.  You could get 1,000 of games on a ball.  You may need to resurface it a couple times but there's no reason it can't last a long time.

Now get your money's worth.  For me if the bowling ball makes me money then I have got my money's worth.  Every piece of equipment I own comes from money won in league and tourney's.  I bought a Raw Hammer Pain and in the first week of using it during league, it paid for itself many times over.  That ball is my biggest money maker.

Eventually a ball will loose a little bit of it's pop.  It may take a lot of games but it will eventually get there.  However once it looses it's pop it may be a very good control piece.


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dizzyfugu

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Re: Longevity of a ball
« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2007, 07:47:50 AM »
With balls it is like with anything in life: once you neglect it, it will go downwards. I guess that when you do not take any care of a current high performance ball, which tend to absorp oil a lot, the ball will surely lose pop. These things need IMHO maintenance, more than some "old school" stuff.

But when you prevent too much oil absorption (wiping) and keep the surface free of machine grime etc. with a cleaner after each session, you can keep a ball up for a very long time.
If the surface tracks out, just make a quick surface refreshment, and you should be fine. Oil extraction every now and then also does wonders. Only in the dire case of damage or an unexplainable loss of grip I'd go for a thorough resurfacing job, since you take away surface material (pffft).

I found that any new ball I had could never be restored back to OOB performance, whatever I tried. On the other side, some old treasures of mine like my Traume (5 years old now) are as good as OOB - fellow bowlers asked me in league if the ball was brand new!?

So, keep yourself from being disappointed, and expect the ball to lose its sharpness. It will happen, anyway. These things are not made for eternity.

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