USBC should have notified Motiv the very instant they started getting information so Motiv could have corrected it and then we wouldn't have had this issue. USBC has fallen out of favor (if it ever was in favor), and I think this just amounted to a statement of "hey look at us, we're doing something!" ANYONE who thinks Motiv was knowingly producing illegal balls needs to exit the conversation, that definitely wasn't happening. Also, anyone that thinks that a ball with a pre-drilled diff of .061 is unfairly superior to a ball with a pre-drilled diff of .058 needs to spend more time reading and learning. Just because something can be more beneficial when it's in the right hands on the right condition used the right way doesn't mean much to the average consumer. I continue to be as unworried about it as I would be if someone brought an illegal driver to a par 3 course.
Good points and I agree with them in total,
BUT, one of these statements, 'USBC has fallen out of favor (if it ever was in favor), and I think this just amounted to a statement of "hey look at us, we're doing something!" '
brings to mind something that has bothered me a lot through out these discussions.
I don't know if anyone else has brought up this topic. If so, please pardon me; there have been so many posts written on this subject, it's impossible to sort through all the facts, innuendos, suppositions, opinions, and pure unadulterated BS that has been posted.
There have been any balls manufactured over the past 20 years or so whose higher RG differential was near or at the then current limit (be it the current .060" or the previous .080"). I think most manufacturers know or realize that during production there will be variations that produce cores whose differential is sometimes UNDER the specification and sometimes OVER the specification.
(Side Note: I know Visionary, at one time [I think it was when the limit was .080"] had a ball, measured at the USBC, which was above the limit; they needed to re-work the core and re-submit it to get it approved. The release date for the ball was moved back. Sorry, I don't remember which ball this was.)
Now these questions come to my mind:
1. Why did the USBC pick Motiv's Jackal, at this point in time, as the ball to examine from field samples to analyze for violation of their rule for maximum RG differential?
2. How many balls did they have to examine to determine that the results implied that too many Jackals in the public's hands were over the limit?
3. What other companies have been examined in this same manner and what percentage of violations were there such that the USBC or the ABC did not see fit to rescind the approval? As far as I know, if a ball has the highest possible differential, it is impossible in a production run for there NOT to be any balls that have a differential over that limit. There will be some over and some under that limit.
So, what percentage of balls made by 1 or more other manufacturers were over the limit but deemed an acceptable amount by the USBC/ABC?
Both organizations keep/kept records, I am sure. So what's the story here. What is an acceptable amount/percentage and by what degree did Motiv go over that set limit?
If none of the above happened, then why has Motiv been singled now? This whole picture seems odd, out of place.