charlest: I don't know what you mean by generalizations. I don't think it's productive to split hairs about the hardness of the various plastic shells. I put out my Spare Storm as an example because it's the first ball that came to mind. I also have a Brunswick Target Zone and a Columbia White Dot (which you mentioned), so if it makes you feel better, substitute those models into my comparison instead.
The bottom line is that all the above mentioned plastics move measurably less than my XXXL on dry conditions where such comparisons are appropriate. The only real difference is the core. I'm not reading this somewhere else or speculating based on hearsay -- these conclusions are from my own 'hands on' experience with these balls. The delivery was the same and the conditions were the same. If you choose not to believe me, that's a different issue.
Regardless, coverstock choice is really a "no-brainer" in most situations (a generalization, but mostly true). I can take 75% of the balls on the market and adjust the cover to match up to most conditions I would find. Generally, cover alternations might not be necessary at all. At my Sunday practice session, I usually bring the following:
1) Track Silencer (Particle, 800 grit)
2) Ebonite Stinger (Resin 1500 grit)
3) Storm Thunder Flash Pro (Strong Urethane, 1000 grit)
On the THS pattern that's usually found, I can throw all three balls with the same effectiveness while lining up just a few boards different. There is that much overlap in 'friction'. If one ball carries a little better than another, it's because of the respective hook shapes, breakpoints and resulting angle of entries. Ironically, these are functions of core and drill patterns.
With today's coverstocks, there is so much overlap on THS patterns that the concept of shell being 70% plus of reaction is far overblown. If this is true (which I firmly believe), why wouldn't you consider hook shape to be a more important factor when trying to achieve higher scores?
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"You want the truth? -- You can't handle the truth! "
Edited on 12/18/2003 10:12 PM