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Author Topic: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?  (Read 21873 times)

michael.willis9

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is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« on: August 16, 2019, 12:00:15 PM »
Now thats been out for a little while, i was wondering what everyone thought of it.  Videos on youtube seem to like it but i also think some of those in the videos have deals with said companies that use it.

I was looking at the new Hero or the OG prowler but wanna know if its worth it

 

nord

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #31 on: June 04, 2022, 10:41:59 PM »
My PSO told me that a Brunswick rep was doing a demo at his shop.
He has a golf ball sized sphere of DynamiCore and a sphere of the normal filler used in most bowling balls.
He dropped the normal filler sphere on the hard floor from a height of about 4 1/2 feet.
When it hit the ground it bounced up and down a few times and then came to rest.
Then he dropped the DynamiCore sphere from the same height.
It hit the ground and never moved a millimeter!
It was like it stuck to the ground like a piece of iron on a super magnet!
The point is, the DynamiCore sphere depleted all of its energy of motion into the floor and had nothing left to rebound with.
This material is like Captain America's shield.
It is not so much that it increases the COR to some illegal level, it is that it releases all of its energy of motion into whatever it hits.
That is why it increases the carry ability of a bowling ball.


Bowler19525

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #32 on: June 04, 2022, 11:45:25 PM »
It is all marketing hype.  CoR in a ball is limited by the USBC.  Manufacturers want people to believe they have found a magic material that transfers energy while having no effect on the CoR numbers.  If these magic fillers really made that much of a difference, all of the manufacturers would have their own version of such materials in their bowling balls.

mainzer

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #33 on: June 05, 2022, 09:14:51 AM »
I see a difference when I switched from Hopkinsville poured stuff without dynamicore to the Brunswick stuff with it. I trip more high 4 pins and buckets, I carry on hits that are a bit off better.
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MainzerPower

ignitebowling

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #34 on: June 05, 2022, 01:09:59 PM »
Its colored filler. Pre the buyout Hammer used orange cored filler for their marketing and Columbia used bright green for their marketing hype but they never applied this amazing technology to the Track or Ebonite brands.

Brunswick dynamicore was last to the game and they were slow to apply this must have amazing technology to DV8 and Radical.

Dynamicore, Hypershock, or Carbonfiber infused is as ground breaking as sliced bread.... except when they are trying to sell you on a ball with no filler then its the best thing ever. Back and forth, back and forth marketing hype
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bowling4burgers

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #35 on: June 05, 2022, 04:28:47 PM »
I want a rubber core...or is it polyester? Or maybe just extra urethane??

https://123bowl.com/bowling-balls/ebonite/gyro-i-red/

Been going on for decades. Why not make the whole thing Continental rubber??? ;D
The Future of Bowling: Bowling is a once-popular tavern game played with a heavy ball and ten pins.

dR3w

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Re: is dynamicore all hype or the real deal?
« Reply #36 on: June 06, 2022, 12:44:39 PM »
My PSO told me that a Brunswick rep was doing a demo at his shop.
He has a golf ball sized sphere of DynamiCore and a sphere of the normal filler used in most bowling balls.
He dropped the normal filler sphere on the hard floor from a height of about 4 1/2 feet.
When it hit the ground it bounced up and down a few times and then came to rest.
Then he dropped the DynamiCore sphere from the same height.
It hit the ground and never moved a millimeter!
It was like it stuck to the ground like a piece of iron on a super magnet!
The point is, the DynamiCore sphere depleted all of its energy of motion into the floor and had nothing left to rebound with.
This material is like Captain America's shield.
It is not so much that it increases the COR to some illegal level, it is that it releases all of its energy of motion into whatever it hits.
That is why it increases the carry ability of a bowling ball.



ummm, I think you have a few misnomers in these statements.  First COR would be 0 here for the dynamicore, since it had no velocity after the collision.   That would constitute a perfectly inelastic collision.

The kinetic energy of the moving ball is lost to either deformation or in sticking to the other object, in this case the floor.  I would believe this would be terrible for bowling.  I would want a maximum COR so that all the energy of the ball is transferred to the pins and no energy is lost to deformation.  It would be like using your driver in golf on a playdough ball and just having it stick to the club face.

Please correct me if i'm wrong here as I would still think if the filler absorbs all the energy of the collision, then you would get no effective pin motion when the ball hit them.

Are you sure you didn't get the two balls mixed up?