I don't agree with everything the USBC does. In fact, I think they do some not so well thought out things at times.
BUT............
How do any of you people put the "blame" for this situation on the USBC?
Y'all claim that the USBC "blindsided" Motiv by banning the two balls with no notice, yet the USBC has said that they were in contact with Motiv as far back as Feb. 26th, and Motiv has yet to refute that.
Some of you yell about "Why can't the USBC allow for manufacturing tolerances?", but that is not the USBC's problem OR responsibility. The tolerance is built in by allowing manufacturers to produce ANY differential up to, BUT NOT EXCEEDING, .060. It is not the USBC's fault OR problem that a ball manufacturer decided to push the limit so hard that they broke through. It was a manufacturing choice that MOTIV made.
The argument has also been made about how can they be "illegal" when older balls, that were approved when the standards were different, are considered "legal" while being well over the current limits. That's like asking how it is still legal to drive a polluting car from the 1950's, 60's or whenever, when we ALL know those cars would not pass todays modern standards, and would not be "legal" if produced today by today's standards, yet we CAN still drive them, even though they are outside of the current limits.
Motiv should have either decided to run the balls at .059 to allow for manufacturing error, or had a MUCH tighter control in place to make sure they stayed within the USBC limits. Many have claimed that 1/1000 doesn't make enough difference to notice, so balls made at .059 are only 1/1000 different than .060, meaning Motiv could've done that and nobody would be able to tell the difference. That would've prevented this situation from ever happening.
If I had a jackal or a carnage, I would be quite aggravated too, so I get where the anger is coming from. I just don't see how you can continue making accusations against the USBC for enforcing well known and accepted rules, and excuses for a manufacturer that either didnt care about the product or the customers who would buy it enough to ensure that the product was everything they said it was.
Now, Motiv has decided to try to get the balls re-approved instead of replacing them like they originally stated they were going to do. How long will that take, and what will they do if those efforts are unsuccessful?
If you are going to be mad at somebody, or place blame on someone, be mad at and blame the entity that created the situation by either having shoddy quality control, or just basically ignoring the set limits and leaving the end consumers holding the bag.