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Author Topic: 90's balls  (Read 8024 times)

xrayjay

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90's balls
« on: December 07, 2016, 11:26:43 AM »
I bowl at a house with lots of friction, and balls that work for me are in the entry level and modern urethane types. Or medium pearl covers as of late.

I was wondering if the balls I've owned in the 90's would be perfect for conditions I bowled today.

I wasn't bowling leagues at all through the 90's, but I did bowl monte carlos, no tap, and for fun.

Balls I owned back then was an Ebonite Turbo X and Storm Flame or Flamer?? I have no clue now and no clue then what type of covers these balls had. I was a speed dominant very low rev player who didn't take the game seriously. But it was NOT HAVING these two balls that helped me get back into leagues and bowling - I had to buy a new one and one that fit my hand. (first nib V2 particle first major ball lol)

Anyway, would these ball mentioned be good for the low volume friction surface I bowl on today?
« Last Edit: December 07, 2016, 11:29:26 AM by xrayjay »
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BeerLeague

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Re: 90's balls
« Reply #16 on: December 12, 2016, 02:19:35 PM »
I can tell you first hand that the older 90's stuff is exactly what the doctor ordered when hitting big wet/dry and high friction surfaces.

I use an old Piranha/C pearl and a Danger Zone when bowing at some local houses near my home.  They hit better than urethane and don't over-react like most modern stuff.  ALL new equipment, even the Tropicals which are the lowest diff ball on the market, hook too much off the dry when on nasty wet / dry lanes. 

Jesse James

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Re: 90's balls
« Reply #17 on: December 12, 2016, 02:57:29 PM »
I can tell you first hand that the older 90's stuff is exactly what the doctor ordered when hitting big wet/dry and high friction surfaces.

I use an old Piranha/C pearl and a Danger Zone when bowing at some local houses near my home.  They hit better than urethane and don't over-react like most modern stuff.  ALL new equipment, even the Tropicals which are the lowest diff ball on the market, hook too much off the dry when on nasty wet / dry lanes.

I will concur with this assessment! I bowl in a high friction house, primarily. The oil conditioning has changed, and the pins have changed, but the lanes are the same. So, based on this, I see my balls moving at a different breakpoint than when I used to bowl in the nineties. Other than that, the friction is still the same.

Therefore, my benchmark ball is a blue Hawk. Followed by a Demo-Zone for a little heavier mediums. And I keep an old pink, 3D Offset on stand-by in the car. Last season, I shot a 299 on a particularly quirky shot with the 3D.

So yes! The nineties balls do come in handy. Rule of thumb: "The first one who finds it, gets the gold." As in getting lined up! I find these 90's balls particularly useful if I want to avoid another player's line on the lanes. And even if I am in the track area.....they don't just jump off the spot like the newer stuff!
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TamerBowling

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Re: 90's balls
« Reply #18 on: December 12, 2016, 04:32:12 PM »
I can tell you first hand that the older 90's stuff is exactly what the doctor ordered when hitting big wet/dry and high friction surfaces.

I use an old Piranha/C pearl and a Danger Zone when bowing at some local houses near my home.  They hit better than urethane and don't over-react like most modern stuff.  ALL new equipment, even the Tropicals which are the lowest diff ball on the market, hook too much off the dry when on nasty wet / dry lanes.

I will concur with this assessment! I bowl in a high friction house, primarily. The oil conditioning has changed, and the pins have changed, but the lanes are the same. So, based on this, I see my balls moving at a different breakpoint than when I used to bowl in the nineties. Other than that, the friction is still the same.

Therefore, my benchmark ball is a blue Hawk. Followed by a Demo-Zone for a little heavier mediums. And I keep an old pink, 3D Offset on stand-by in the car. Last season, I shot a 299 on a particularly quirky shot with the 3D.

So yes! The nineties balls do come in handy. Rule of thumb: "The first one who finds it, gets the gold." As in getting lined up! I find these 90's balls particularly useful if I want to avoid another player's line on the lanes. And even if I am in the track area.....they don't just jump off the spot like the newer stuff!

Exactly.  That's what I was saying earlier. 
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